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A Woman's Life : Pauline Wengeroff and Memoirs of a Grandmother by Shulamit S. Magnus read online ebook TXT, PDF

9781906764524
English

1906764522
In 1908, Pauline Wengeroff published the first piece of writing by a woman in the history of Jewish literature to tell the story of a life and a family with historical consciousness and purpose. It is also the first account in this literature to make women, and men, the focus of inquiry. Shulamit Magnus's biography of this extraordinary woman lets readers share Wengeroff's life, her aspirations, and her disappointments, making a significant contribution both to women's history and to our understanding of the emergence and shape of Jewish modernity., Pauline Wengeroff was born in 1833 into a pious Jewish family in Bobruisk (in what is now Belarus), and she died in 1916 in Minsk. Her life, as recounted in this biography, based in part on Shulamit Magnus's award-winning critical edition of Wengeroff's Memoirs of a Grandmother, was one of upheaval and transformation during Russian Jewry's passage from tradition to modernity. Remarkably, Wengeroff's narrative refracts communal experience and larger cultural, economic, and political developments through her own family life, interweaving the personal and the historical, to present readers with an extraordinary account of the cultural transformation of Russian Jewry in the 19th century. Wengeroff's is the first piece of writing by a Jewish woman to display such authorial audacity and historical awareness, and the first contemporaneous account of Jewish society in any era to make the sensibilities and behavior of Jewish women - and men - a central focus, providing a gendered account of the emergence of Jewish modernity. In this, her memoirs are a full counterpart to the male-centered autobiographies of her contemporaries, and the basis for much new thinking about gender and modernity. Shulamit Magnus probes Wengeroff's consciousness and social positioning as a woman of her era and argues that, though Wengeroff was well aware of the women's movement in Russia, she wrote not from a feminist perspective but because of her socialization in traditional Jewish society. A brilliant woman who loved books, Wengeroff produced a carefully crafted, beautifully written, and compelling account of tradition and its demise; of intergenerational and marital strife over Jewishness; and of betrayal, loss, and hope. Despite a dramatic and readily accessible narrative - what Magnus calls "Wengeroff's myth of her life story" - Wengeroff embeds much counter-evidence in her memoirs that subverts this same myth. Why she constructs - and also, if unconsciously, subverts - the particular myth she does is a major focus of this study. Using archival and secondary sources, Magnus goes beyond constructing a portrait of Pauline Wengeroff, her family, and her social circles to consider how Memoirs of a Grandmother came to be in the form in which we have it: this is a biography of a literary work, as well as of a woman. She documents its astonishing success. When Pauline Wengeroff died in 1916, the world was very different from the one in which she had grown up. Her story makes a significant contribution to Jewish women's history; to east European Jewish history; to the history of gender, acculturation, and assimilation in Jewish modernity; and to the history of Jewish writing and Jewish women's writing. Subject: Biography, Jewish Studies, Women's Studies]

A Woman's Life : Pauline Wengeroff and Memoirs of a Grandmother by Shulamit S. Magnus read online FB2, PDF

His memoirs of the voyage are presented in this two-volume account, first published in 1833.NBC comedy.' Booklist 'Certainly for fans of The Office, but the amiable actor also offers thoughtful glimpses into the realities of the TV and film industry and an impassioned rationale for living an openly spiritual life.' Kirkus Reviews, Rainn Wilson's memoir about growing up geeky and finally finding his place in comedy, faith, and life.