To install click the Add extension button. That's it.

The source code for the WIKI 2 extension is being checked by specialists of the Mozilla Foundation, Google, and Apple. You could also do it yourself at any point in time.

4,5
Kelly Slayton
Congratulations on this excellent venture… what a great idea!
Alexander Grigorievskiy
I use WIKI 2 every day and almost forgot how the original Wikipedia looks like.
Live Statistics
English Articles
Improved in 24 Hours
Added in 24 Hours
Languages
Recent
Show all languages
What we do. Every page goes through several hundred of perfecting techniques; in live mode. Quite the same Wikipedia. Just better.
.
Leo
Newton
Brights
Milds

Jews without Money

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mike Gold (1930s), author of Jews Without Money

Jews Without Money is a 1930 semi-autobiographical novel by American critic Mike Gold.

YouTube Encyclopedic

  • 1/3
    Views:
    713
    1 225
    1 919
  • The Story of Jewish Families and Their English Country Houses
  • What Swedish Police Records Reveal About the Rescue of Denmark’s Jews
  • From Tesfa to Tikva: 25 Years of Ethiopian Jews in Israel

Transcription

Description

Published by Horace Liveright shortly after the onset of the Great Depression,[1] the novel is a fictionalized autobiography about growing up in the impoverished world of the Lower East Side, beginning in the 1890s.[2] Jews without Money was an immediate success and was reprinted 25 times by 1950. It was translated into 16 languages.[3] It became a prototype for the American proletarian novel.[4]

Jews without Money is set in a slum populated mainly by Jewish immigrants from Eastern Europe. The father of the hero is a Romanian-born painter who suffers from lead poisoning. When he falls from a scaffold, he is disabled and can no longer work. His business fails and the family is pushed into poverty. The mother has to seek work in a restaurant. Although he is a bright boy, young Michael decides he must leave school. On the final page of the book, the poor Jewish boy prays for the arrival of a Marxist worker's revolution that will emancipate the working class.

The novel depicts a Zionist entrepreneur's fatal extortion of a poor Jew, which has been read as a proletarian critique of both American capitalism and of Zionism as a "bourgeois" movement that does not serve the interests of working-class American Jews.[a][5]

In his authorial note to the novel, Gold wrote, "I have told in my book a tale of Jewish poverty in one ghetto, that of New York. The same story can be of a hundred other ghettoes scattered over all the world. For centuries the Jew has lived in this universal ghetto."

See also

References

  1. ^ Jews without Money, New York: Horace Liveright, 1930. Reprinted by Carol & Graf, 2004.
  2. ^ Barry Gross, "Michael Gold (1893–1967)", The Heath Anthology of American Literature, ed. Paul Lauter, 5th edition. http://college.cengage.com/english/lauter/heath/4e/students/author_pages/modern/gold_mi.html
  3. ^ Taylor Dorrell (October 16, 2022). "Mike Gold Was a Working-Class Hero". Jacobin.
  4. ^ Tuerk, Richard. “‘Jews Without Money’ as a Work of Art.” Studies in American Jewish Literature (1981-), vol. 7, no. 1, 1988, pp. 67–79. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/41205675. (subscription required) Accessed 27 Jan. 2023.
  5. ^ "Mike Gold, the Writer Who Believed Workers Could Speak for Themselves". Jacobin. Retrieved 2023-05-06.

Sources

Notes

  1. ^ Jews without Money deals with the travails of a Rumanian Jewish painter who seeks to rise out of his difficulties by cultivating the company of a wealthy Brooklyn Zionist leader Baruch Goldfarb, depicted as a bourgeois fraudster who prays on gullible working-class Jews. Goldfarb offers him glowing prospects, a house in "God's country", a Jewish enclave in the suburbs, away from the multiethnic milieu he lives in and who gets him to join his gaudy, politicized lodge where vote-rigging and spying on labour unions is organized. Goldfarb eventually wheedles him out of his money (Balthaser 2020, pp. 449–450).
This page was last edited on 7 May 2023, at 02:27
Basis of this page is in Wikipedia. Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 Unported License. Non-text media are available under their specified licenses. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. WIKI 2 is an independent company and has no affiliation with Wikimedia Foundation.