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Bidding Information
Lot #
25530
Auction End Date
1/12/2010 10:36:30 AM (mm/dd/yyyy)
Title Information
Title (English)
Ha-Toren
Title (Hebrew)
äúøï
Author
[Periodical - Zionism]
City
New York
Publisher
Safruth Publ. Co.
Publication Date
1923
Collection Information
Independent Item
This listing is an independent item not part of any collection
Description Information
Physical
Description
5 issues, 274:190 mm., light age staining. A very good copy bound in contemporary boards, rubbed and split.
Detailed
Description
Five issues, Nissan - Elul 5623 (1923) of the monthly Zionist literary magazine Ha-Toren edited by Reuben Brainin (1862–1939), Hebrew and Yiddish author. Brainin was born in Lyady, Belorussia, and received a traditional Jewish education. His first article was on the last days of Perez Smolenskin (Ha-Meliẓ (1888), no. 59). In 1892 he settled in Vienna where he published an influential but short-lived periodical Mi-Mizraḥ u-mi-Ma'arav (1894–99) which was intended to be a bridge between European and Hebrew literature. Only four issues were published at long intervals, with articles on Tolstoy, Nietzsche, Ibsen, and Hebrew scholars such as R. Elijah b. Solomon Zalman of Vilna. Brainin also published essays in the annual Ahi'asaf. He attracted wide attention with his caustic critique of Judah Leib Gordon in the first issue of Ha-Shilo'aḥ (1896), edited by Ahad Ha-Am . The central theme of Brainin's work was Hebrew literature in the context of world literature. His flair for biography came to the fore in monographs on two great writers of the Haskalah period, Perez Smolenskin (1896) and Abraham Mapu (1900), which possessed an unusual freshness of tone and approach. He championed the young and unknown Saul Tchernichowsky , who became one of the great Hebrew poets of the century. In Ha-Dor (founded in 1900), Brainin published articles and sketches on contemporary Hebrew writers and artists. There was hardly a Hebrew periodical of the time to which Brainin did not contribute. He also wrote extensively in Yiddish and contributed articles to the Russian-Jewish press. In 1909 Brainin settled in America where he founded the periodical Ha-Deror. He spent a few years in Canada, where he edited two Yiddish papers: first the Kanader Adler (1912–15), then Der Weg (1915–16). He returned to New York and assumed the editorship of Ha-Toren (1919–25), first as a weekly, then as a monthly. In New York he also published the first volume of an uncompleted biography of Herzl, Hayyei Herzl (1919), covering the period up to the First Zionist Congress. Toward the end of his life, Brainin wrote almost exclusively in Yiddish. His championship of the autonomous Jewish province of Birobidzhan in Soviet Russia alienated him from Hebrew writers and Hebrew literature. The three volumes of his selected writings (Ketavim Nivḥarim, 1922–40) afford an insight into his activities as a critic, publicist, and writer of sketches and short impressionistic stories. He also translated into Hebrew M. Lazarus' Der Prophet Jeremias (1897) and Max Nordau's Paradoxes (1901). (For English translations of his works see Goell , Bibliography, 2010, 2763–73.)
Reference
Description
Deinard 983; 984?; EJ
Associated Images
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Caption
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Listing Classification
Period
20th Century:
Checked
Location
America-South America:
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Subject
Other:
Zionism
Characteristic
First Editions:
Checked
Language:
Hebrew
Manuscript Type
Kind of Judaica