From the Vilna Ghetto to Nuremberg : memoir and testimony /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Sutzkever, Abraham, 1913-2010, author.
Uniform title:Fun Ṿilner geṭo. English
Imprint:Montreal ; Kingston ; London ; Chicago : McGill-Queen's University Press, [2021]
©2021
Description:ix, 475 pages : illustrations, maps ; 23 cm
Language:English
Subject:
Format: Map Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/12769791
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Other uniform titles:Ṿilner Geṭo. English.
Other authors / contributors:Cammy, Justin Daniel, translator, editor.
ISBN:9780228008996
0228008999
9780228008927
0228008921
9780228010432
9780228010449
Notes:"A Yiddish Book Center Translation."
Translation of: Fun Ṿilner geṭo.
Two Yiddish editions of Abraham Sutzkever's Vilna Ghetto were published in early 1946. One appeared in Moscow under the title From the Vilna Ghetto, and the other in Paris as Vilna Ghetto: 1941-1944. This translation is based on the Moscow edition, and cross-checked against the Paris edition for textual variants.
Includes bibliographical references (pages 387-450) and index.
Issued also in electronic format.
Translated from the Yiddish.
Summary:"In 1944, the Yiddish poet Abraham Sutzkever was airlifted to Moscow from the forest where he had spent the winter among partisan fighters. There he was encouraged by Ilya Ehrenburg, the most famous Soviet Jewish writer of his day, to write a memoir of his two years in the Vilna Ghetto. Now, seventy-five years after it appeared in Yiddish in 1946, Justin Cammy provides a full English translation of one of the earliest published memoirs of the destruction of the city known throughout the Jewish world as the Jerusalem of Lithuania. Based on his own experiences, his conversations with survivors, and his consultation with materials hidden in the ghetto and recovered after the liberation of his hometown, Sutzkever's memoir rests at the intersection of postwar Holocaust literature and history. He grappled with the responsibility to produce a document that would indict the perpetrators and provide an account of both the horrors and the resilience of Jewish life under Nazi rule. Cammy bases his translation on the two extant versions of the full text of the memoir and includes Sutzkever's diary notes and full testimony at the Nuremberg Trials in 1946. Fascinating reminiscences of leading Soviet Yiddish cultural figures Sutzkever encountered during his time in Moscow--Ehrenburg, Yiddish modernist poet Peretz Markish, and director of the State Yiddish Theatre Shloyme Mikhoels--reveal the constraints of the political environment in which the memoir was composed. Both shocking and moving in its intensity, From the Vilna Ghetto returns readers to a moment when the scale of the Holocaust was first coming into focus, through the eyes of one survivor who attempted to make sense of daily life, resistance, and death in the ghetto."--
Other form:Online version: Sutzkever, Abraham, 1913-2010. Fun Ṿilner geṭo. English. From the Vilna Ghetto to Nuremberg. Montreal ; Kingston ; London ; Chicago : McGill-Queen's University Press, 2021 0228010438 9780228010432

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Call Number: DS135.L52V557813 2021
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