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| Biography: Isaac Bashevis Singer |
Isaac Bashevis Singer (1904-1991), Polish-American author, was admired for his re-creation of the forgotten world of provincial 19th-century Poland and his depiction of a timeless Jewish ghetto existence.
Isaac Bashevis Singer was born on July 14, 1904, in Radzymin, Poland. In his family's rabbinic tradition, he was groomed for Hasidism, attending a Warsaw seminary. However, he decided on a writing career. After completing his seminary studies, he worked as a journalist for the Yiddish press in various parts of Poland. Emigrating to the United States in 1935, Singer became a reporter for the Daily Forward in New York City, America's largest Yiddish newspaper. Although he personally adapted to his new habitat, his early literary efforts display nostalgia for the "old country"; the subjects seem part of a distant past remembered from vivid tales of Polish storytellers.
Singer's first novel, The Family Moskat (1950), was likened by critics to the narratives of Ivan Turgenev and Honoré de Balzac. Based on Singer's own family, the novel succeeds in translating the almost metaphysical existence of an orthodox Jewish home into a universal reality. Two short stories, "Satan in Goray" and "The Dybbuk and the Golem" (1955), treat the provincialism, superstition, and naiveté of eastern European peasants. A collection of short narratives, Gimpel, the Fool, and Other Stories (1957), reworked earlier themes but skillfully avoided repetition. Beneath the grotesque and folk elements, Singer includes in "Gimpel" a psychological-theological moral conflict in which an uncomplicated man finds his idyllic existence threatened by black magic and sorcery.
Modern man is the subject of Singer's novel The Magician of Lublin (1960), which portrays a protagonist who dares to violate the sanctity of tradition. The novel lacks the superb intricacy of The Family Moskat and the haunting suspense of "Gimpel." Still grappling with the modern experience, Singer sets the 11 short pieces of The Spinoza of Market Street (1961) in a post-World War II Polish ghetto. Having departed from his quaintly provincial world into contemporary urban madness, Singer revealed the stylistic limitations of his simple, flowing prose range. "I've always stayed in my same nook, my same corner," Singer reflected in retrospect. "If a writer ventures out of his corner he is nothing."
The Slave (1962), an epic of 17th-century Poland, recounts the brutal world of Russian Cossacks through the eyes of an enslaved, sensitive, pious Jew; yet somehow the work appeals to modern sensibilities. Once again Singer's flawless prose recaptures a timeless folk element. When a collection of vignettes filled with memories of Singer's childhood in the Warsaw ghetto, A Day of Pleasure: Stories of a Boy Growing Up in Warsaw (1969), won the National Book Award for children's literature, Singer remarked that he wrote for young people because "they still believe in God, the family, angels, devils, witches, goblins, and other such obsolete stuff." A Friend of Kafka, a collection of short fiction, appeared in 1970.
Recipient of numerous other literary awards, Singer remained an active journalist and critic for the Daily Forward throughout. He always wrote in Yiddish and then worked closely with his English translators because of the difficulty in finding equivalents for his subtle verbal nuances. His "simple" and "unchanging" fictions paradoxically have gained in popularity with a new generation possessing a taste for an obscure and sometimes grotesque past which seems more tangible than a nebulous future, for his stories capture the essence of the human condition.
Singer received numerous awards thoughout the latter portion of his life. Some of the more noted include Nobel Prize in literature (1978) and the Gold Medal for Fiction (1989). Singer continued to publish new material until his death in 1991.
Further Reading
Full-length studies of Singer include Irving H. Buchen, Isaac Bashevis Singer and the Eternal Past (1968), a critical appraisal of the various themes in Singer's work, and Ben Siegel, Isaac Bashevis Singer (1969). Marcia Allentuck, The Achievement of Isaac Bashevis Singer (1969), contains appraisals by 12 scholars, and Irving Malin, ed., Critical Views of Isaac Bashevis Singer (1969), is particularly useful for explications of obscure elements in Singer's fiction.
| Fairy Tale Companion: Isaac Bashevis Singer |
Singer, Isaac Bashevis (1904–91), writer of Yiddish stories, novels, memoirs, and children's books. Most of his work has been translated into English, with his own careful direction and participation, and much of it reflects motifs of Jewish folklore. Singer was born in Poland but emigrated to the United States before World War II. His fiction is populated with demons, dybbuks, imps, witches, ghosts, angels, magicians, and other traditional figures (including the Golem) summoned in part from the mystical vision of his father, a Hassidic rabbi, but drawn with the sharp‐edged realism that characterized his mother. Fuelled by his parents' active storytelling and his own experience of shtetl culture, Singer believed that all good literature has roots in ethnic lore. Zlateh the Goat and Other Stories (1966), The Fearsome Inn (1967), and When Shlemiel Went to Warsaw and Other Stories (1968) won critical acclaim as Newbery Honor Books, while The Fools of Chelm (1973) remains an all‐time favourite with children. A deceptively simple style, rhythmic pace, and orally tuned narrative patterns contribute to the folkloric tone of his work. (Singer's distinguished illustrators include Maurice Sendak, Uri Shulevitz, Margot Zemach, and Nonny Hogrogian.) In his adult books, too, Singer juggled fantastical dreams and desperate plights, with the ultimate miracle often depending on the wisdom of innocents, as in ‘Gimpel the Fool’ (1954). Singer won a US National Book Award for A Day of Pleasure: Stories of a Boy Growing up in Warsaw (1969) and received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1978.
Bibliography
— Betsy Hearne
| Columbia Encyclopedia: Isaac Bashevis Singer |
Singer's work, often frankly sexual, draws heavily on Jewish folklore, religion, and mysticism and frequently deals with shtetl life in pre-Holocaust Eastern Europe. Many of his later works treat the loneliness of old age and the sense of alienation produced in Jews by the dissolution of values through assimilation with the Gentile world. His novels include Satan in Goray (1933, tr. 1955), The Family Moskat (1945, tr. 1950), The Slave (tr. 1962), The Manor (tr. 1967), Enemies (tr. 1972), Shosha (tr. 1978), The Penitent (tr. 1983), Scum (tr. 1991), and the posthumously published Shadows on the Hudson (tr. 1997).
Singer is also highly regarded for his hundreds of vivid, imaginative, perceptive, and witty short stories. Collections include Gimpel the Fool (tr. 1961), The Spinoza of Market Street (tr. 1961), Old Love (tr. 1979), and The Death of Methuselah (tr. 1985). In 2004 his Collected Stories, in English translation, were published in three volumes. Singer also wrote books for children and several plays, notably The Mirror (tr. 1973). Though he wrote in Yiddish, he was fluent in English and closely supervised the English translations of his works. In 1978 he won the Nobel Prize in Literature, the first Yiddish-language author to be so honored.
Bibliography
See his autobiographical In My Father's Court (1966); his memoirs, A Little Boy in Search of God (1976), A Young Man in Search of Love (1978), Lost in America (1979), and Love and Exile (1984); biographies by P. Kresh (1979), C. Sinclair (1983), J. Hadda (1997), and F. Noiville (2006); I. Stavans, ed., Isaac Bashevis Singer: An Album (2004); studies by E. Alexander (1980), D. N. Miller (1985), and G. Farrell and B. Farrell, ed. (1996).
| Works: Works by Isaac Bashevis Singer |
| 1935 | Satan in Goray. Singer's first major work about the impact of a seventeenth-century pogrom is published in Warsaw (translated from Yiddish in 1955). Also in 1935 the writer immigrates from Poland to the United States, joining the staff of the Jewish Daily Forward, where he would work until his death. |
| 1950 | The Family Moskat. Singer's second novel, a family saga tracing the destruction of the Jewish community in Poland from the turn of the century to World War II, had been serialized in Yiddish from 1945 to 1948 and becomes Singer's first book to appear in English. |
| 1953 | "Gimpel the Fool." Saul Bellow's translation of Singer's short story appears in the Partisan Review and brings its author his first major recognition beyond his Yiddish-speaking audience. It would be followed by an English translation of Singer's first novel, Satan in Goray, in 1955 and stand as the title story of Singer's first short story collection in 1957. |
| 1960 | The Magician of Lublin. Written in 1958 and serialized in the Jewish Daily Forward in 1959, Singer's novel is set in nineteenth-century Poland and concerns a master magician whose powers are insufficient for him to escape his self-imposed prisons. |
| 1961 | The Spinoza of Market Street and Other Stories. Singer's second story collection features the title work about a Jewish scholar who finds happiness in marriage rather than philosophy. Two additional collections would be published during the decade, Short Fridays (1964) and The Seance (1968). |
| 1962 | The Slave. Regarded by many as Singer's finest novel, the story is set in seventeenth-century Poland and concerns a Jewish scholar and teacher who is sold into slavery by the invading Cossacks. He falls in love with a Ukrainian peasant's daughter, and when the couple are forbidden to marry by Polish and Jewish law, they become outcasts. The novel presents multiple forms of enslavement to God, religion, and conscience in a powerful love story. |
| 1966 | Zlateh the Goat and Other Stories. Singer's first collection of children's stories is illustrated by Maurice Sendak. |
| 1966 | In My Father's Court. The first volume of Singer's memoirs. Subsequent volumes are A Little Boy's Search for God (1976), A Young Man's Search for Love (1978), Lost in America (1981), and Love and Exile (1984). |
| 1967 | The Manor. Set between the Polish insurrection of 1863 and the end of the nineteenth century, Singer's panoramic social chronicle documents the transition of Polish and Jewish communities into the modern world. Written between 1953 and 1965 and first serialized in the Daily Forward, the saga would be concluded in The Estate (1969). |
| 1969 | A Day of Pleasure: Stories of a Boy Growing Up in Warsaw. Singer wins the second National Book Award ever given in children's literature (the first had been won by Meindert Dejong [1906-1991] for Journey from Peppermint Street, 1968) for this collection of scenes of Jewish ghetto life in Poland in the 1930s. |
| 1970 | Enemies: A Love Story. Singer's first novel set in the United States deals with the complications that arise when a Polish Jew marries the woman who had helped him escape the Nazis; he wrongly assumes that his first wife had been killed in the war. Singer also issues A Friend of Kafka, and Other Stories, a collection treating Jewish immigrants in America, Israel, and Argentina. |
| 1973 | A Crown of Feathers and Other Stories. Singer's collection shares the National Book Award for fiction with Thomas Pynchon's Gravity's Rainbow. It is noteworthy for its depiction of life in America. |
| 1975 | Passions and Other Stories. Singer's story collection treats various occurrences of passion gone astray in works such as "Old Love" and "The Admirer." It would be followed by Singer's eighth story collection, Old Love (1979). |
| 1978 | Shosha. After more contemporary stories, Singer returns to ghetto life in Poland before World War II in this novel about a young journalist/budding novelist who chooses a quiet backward woman for his bride. Singer also publishes A Young Man in Search of Love, a memoir treating his struggles to become a writer. |
| 1981 | Lost in America. Singer's third autobiographical volume is described as "fiction set against a background of truth." Singer remains a storyteller, omitting, distorting, and adding details that make a good story but not necessarily an entirely factual record of his life. |
| 1982 | Collected Stories. This volume contains forty-seven stories, considered the best work by this Nobel Prize winner because they so deftly portray the human spirit ensnared in a world of powerful, callous, and sometimes hostile forces. |
| 1983 | The Penitent. Singer's novel concerns Joseph Shapiro, "the penitent," who tells his story to Singer at the Wailing Wall in Jerusalem in 1969. A Polish Jew who had escaped the Holocaust and settled in New York City and then in Israel recounts his search for a code of life and a place in the world. This search entails the abandonment of Orthodox Judaism and any kind of religious orientation. Through Shapiro's narrative, Singer relentlessly explores the troubling consequences of a world that forsakes traditional forms of belief and culture. |
| 1985 | The Image, and Other Stories. While continuing to explore the comic and outrageous behavior of Polish Jews in their small villages, Singer also shrewdly depicts the lives of New World Jews, immigrants, and the tensions between religious and spiritual awareness and the desire for love, and the success and comfort of a materialistic life. |
| 1988 | The Death of Methuselah, and Other Stories. The last of Singer's story collections published during his lifetime deals with the danger of desire in stories set in eastern Europe, New York City, Florida, and ancient Babylon. Singer also publishes The King of the Fields, a novel set in prehistoric Poland, which deals with the conflict between farmers and hunter-gatherers in a parable of modern civilization. |
| 1991 | Scum. Set in 1906, this posthumously published novel concerns a Jewish businessman who travels back to his roots in Warsaw, where he gets involved with a rabbi's daughter. |
| 1992 | The Certificate. This translation of an early autobiographical novel by Singer had been serialized in the Jewish Daily Forward in 1967. It concerns an aspiring writer's return to Warsaw in the 1920s and is noteworthy for what it reveals about Singer's early artistic ideas. |
| Quotes By: Isaac Bashevis Singer |
Quotes:
"The waste basket is a writer's best friend."
"The New England conscience doesn't keep you from doing what you shouldn't -- it just keeps you from enjoying it."
"The greatness of art is not to find what is common but what is unique."
"If you keep on saying things are going to be bad, you have a good chance of being a prophet."
"There is great treasure there behind our skull and this is true about all of us. This little treasure has great, great powers, and I would say we only have learnt a very, very small part of what it can do."
"The second half of the twentieth century is a complete flop."
See more famous quotes by
Isaac Bashevis Singer
| Wikipedia: Isaac Bashevis Singer |
| Isaac Bashevis Singer | |
|---|---|
| Born | November 21, 1902 Leoncin, Congress Poland |
| Died | July 24, 1991 (aged 88) Surfside, Florida, United States |
| Occupation | Novelist, short story writer |
| Language | Yiddish |
| Nationality | American |
| Genres | Fictional prose |
| Notable award(s) | Nobel Prize in Literature 1978 |
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Influences
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Isaac Bashevis Singer (Yiddish: יצחק באַשעװיס זינגער) (November 21, 1902 (see notes below) – July 24, 1991) was a Polish-born Jewish American Nobel Prize-winning author and one of the leading figures in the Yiddish literary movement.
Contents |
Isaac Bashevis Singer was born in 1902 in Leoncin village near Warsaw, Poland, then part of the Russian Empire. A few years later, the family moved to a nearby Polish town of Radzymin, which is often and erroneously given as his birthplace. The exact date of his birth is uncertain, but most probably it was November 21, 1902, a date that Singer gave both to his official biographer Paul Kresh,[1] and his secretary Dvorah Telushkin.[2] It is also consistent with the historical events he and his brother refer to in their childhood memoirs. The often quoted birth date, July 14, 1904 was made up by the author in his youth, most probably to make himself younger to avoid the draft[3] .
His father was a Hasidic rabbi and his mother, Bathsheba, was the daughter of the rabbi of Biłgoraj. Singer later used her name in his pen name "Bashevis" (Bathsheba's). His elder siblings--brother Israel Joshua Singer (1893-1944) and sister Esther Kreitman (1891–1954)--were also writers. Esther was the first in the family to write stories.[4]
The family moved to the court of the Rabbi of Radzymin in 1907, where his father became head of the Yeshiva. After the Yeshiva building burned down in 1908, the family moved to Krochmalna Street in the Yiddish-speaking poor Jewish quarter of Warsaw, where Singer grew up. There his father acted as a rabbi — i.e., judge, arbitrator, religious authority and spiritual leader.[5]
In 1917, because of the hardships of World War I, the family had to split up. Singer moved with his mother and younger brother Moshe to his mother's hometown of Biłgoraj, a traditional Jewish town or shtetl, where his mother's brothers had followed his grandfather as rabbis.[5] When his father became a village rabbi again in 1921, Singer went back to Warsaw, where he entered the Tachkemoni Rabbinical Seminary. However, he soon found out that neither the school nor the profession suited him. He returned to Biłgoraj, where he tried to support himself by giving Hebrew lessons, but soon gave up and joined his parents, considering himself a failure. In 1923 his older brother Israel Joshua arranged for him to move to Warsaw to work as a proofreader for the Literarische Bleter, of which he was an editor.[6]
In 1935, four years before the German invasion and the Holocaust, Singer emigrated from Poland to the United States due to the growing Nazi threat in neighboring Germany.[7] The move separated the author from his common law first wife Runia Pontsch and son Israel Zamir {b.1929}, who instead went to Moscow and then Palestine (they would meet in 1955). Singer settled in New York, where he took up work as a journalist and columnist for The Forward (פֿאָרװערטס), a Yiddish-language newspaper. After a promising start, he became despondent and felt for some years "Lost in America" (title of a Singer novel, in Yiddish from 1974 onward, in English 1981). In 1938, he met Alma Wassermann (born Haimann) {b.1907-d.1996}, a German-Jewish refugee from Munich whom he married in 1940. Re-married, he returned to prolific writing and to contributing to the Forward, using, besides "Bashevis," the pen names "Varshavsky" and "D. Segal."[8]
Singer died on July 24, 1991 in Surfside, Florida, after suffering a series of strokes. He was buried in Cedar Park Cemetery, Emerson.[9][10] A street in Surfside, Florida is named Isaac Bashevis Singer Boulevard in his honor. Furthermore, the full academic scholarship for undergraduate students at the University of Miami is named in his honor.
Singer's first published story won the literary competition of the "literarishe bletter" and garnered him a reputation as a promising talent. A reflection of his formative years in "the kitchen of literature"[2] can be found in many of his later works. I. B. Singer published his first novel Satan in Goray in installments in the literary magazine Globus, which he cofounded with his life-long friend, the Yiddish poet Aaron Zeitlin in 1935. It tells the story of events in 1648 in the village of Goraj (close to Biłgoraj), where the Jews of Poland lost a third of their population in a cruel uprising by Cossacks, and details the effects of the seventeenth-century faraway false messiah Shabbatai Zvi on the local population. Its last chapter imitates the style of medieval Yiddish chronicle. With a stark depiction of innocence crushed by circumstance, the novel appears to foreshadow coming danger. In his later work The Slave (1962), Singer returns to the aftermath of 1648, in a love story between a Jewish man and a Gentile woman, where he depicts the traumatized and desperate survivors of the historic catastrophe with even deeper understanding.
Singer became an actual literary contributor to the Forward only following his older brother's death in 1945, when he published "The Family Moskat" in his honor. But his own style showed in the daring turns of his action and characters - with (and this in the Jewish family-newspaper in 1945) double adultery in the holiest of nights of Judaism, the evening of Yom Kippur. He was almost forced to stop writing the novel by his legendary editor-in-chief, Abraham Cahan, but was saved by readers who wanted the story to go on. After this, his stories - which he had published in Yiddish literary newspapers before - were printed in the Forward as well. Throughout the 1940s, Singer's reputation grew. After World War II and the near destruction of the Yiddish-speaking peoples, Yiddish seemed to be a dead language. Though Singer had moved to the United States, he believed in the power of his native language and maintained that there was still a large audience that longed to read in Yiddish. In an interview in Encounter (Feb. 1979), he claimed that although the Jews of Poland had died, "something - call it spirit or whatever - is still somewhere in the universe. This is a mystical kind of feeling, but I feel there is truth in it."
Some of his colleagues and readers were shocked by this all-encompassing view of human nature. He wrote about female homosexuality ("Zeitl and Rickl" in "The Seance"), transvestitism ("Yentl the Yeshiva Boy" in "Short Friday"), and of rabbis corrupted by demons ("Zeidlus the Pope" in "Short Friday"). In those novels and stories which seem to recount his own life, he portrays himself unflatteringly (with some degree of accuracy) as an artist who is self-centered yet has a keen eye for the sufferings and tribulations of others.
Singer had many literary influences; besides the religious texts he studied there where the folktales he grew up with and worldly Yiddish detective-stories about "Max Spitzkopf" and his assistant "Fuchs"[3]; there was Dostoyevsky, whose Crime and Punishment he read when he was fourteen[11]; and he writes about the importance of the Yiddish translations donated in book-crates from America, which he studied as a teenager in Bilgoraj: "I read everything: Stories, novels, plays, essays… I read Rejsen, Strindberg, Don Kaplanowitsch, Turgenev, Tolstoy, Maupassant and Chekhov."[11] He studied many philosophers, among them Baruch Spinoza[11]., Arthur Schopenhauer[4], and Otto Weininger[3]. Among his Yiddish contemporaries Singer himself considered his older brother to be his greatest artistic example; he was a life-long friend and admirer of the author and poet Aaron Zeitlin. Of his non-Yiddish-contemporaries he was strongly influenced by the writings of Knut Hamsun, many of whose works he later translated, while he had more critical attitude towards Thomas Mann, whose approach to writing he considered opposed to his own[12]. Contrary to Hamsun's approach, Singer shaped his world not only with the egos of his characters, but also using the moral commitments of the Jewish tradition that he grew up with and that his father embodies in the stories about his youth. This led to the dichotomy between the life his heroes lead and the life they feel they should lead - which gives his art a modernity his predecessors do not evince. His themes of witchcraft, mystery and legend draw on traditional sources, but they are contrasted with a modern and ironic consciousness. They are also concerned with the bizarre and the grotesque.
Another important strand of his art is intra-familial strife - which he experienced firsthand when taking refuge with his mother and younger brother at his uncles home in Biłgoraj. This is the central theme in Singer's big family chronicles - like The Family Moskat (1950), The Manor (1967), and The Estate (1969). Some are reminded by them of Thomas Mann's novel Buddenbrooks; Singer had translated Mann's Der Zauberberg (The Magic Mountain) into Yiddish as a young writer.
Singer always wrote and published in Yiddish (almost all of it in newspapers) and then edited his novels and stories for their American versions, which became the basis for all other translations (he talked of his "second original"). This has led to an ongoing controversy whereby the "real Singer" can be found either in the Yiddish original, with its finely tuned language and sometimes rambling construction, or in the tightly edited American copy, where the language is usually simpler and more direct. Many stories and novels of I. B. Singer have not yet undergone translation.
In the short story form, in which many critics feel he made his most lasting contributions, his greatest influences were Chekhov and Maupassant. From Maupassant, Singer developed a finely grained sense of drama. Like the French master, Singer's stories can pack enormous visceral excitement in the space of a few pages. From Chekhov, Singer developed his ability to draw characters of enormous complexity and dignity in the briefest of spaces. In the forward to his personally selected volume of his finest short stories he describes the two aforementioned writers as the greatest masters of the short story form.
Singer published at least 18 novels, 14 children's books, a number of memoirs, essays and articles, but is best known as a writer of short stories, which have appeared in over a dozen collections. The first collection of Singer's short stories in English, Gimpel the Fool, was published in 1957. The title story was translated by Saul Bellow and published in May 1953 in Partisan Review. Selections from Singer's "Varshavsky-stories" in the Daily Forward were later published in anthologies as My Father's Court (1966). Later collections include A Crown of Feathers (1973), with notable masterpieces in between, such as The Spinoza of Market Street (1961) and A Friend of Kafka (1970). His stories and novels reflect the world of the East European Jewry he grew up in - in its complexity and grandeur, its material poverty and spiritual splendor. And, after his many years in America, his stories also concerned themselves with the world of the immigrants and how their American dream proves elusive both when they obtain it, e.g. Salomon Margolin, the successful doctor of "A Wedding in Brownsville" (in Short Friday) who finds out his true love was killed by the Nazis, and when it escapes them as it does the "Cabalist of East Broadway" (in A Crown of Feathers), who prefers the misery of the Lower East Side to an honored and secure life as a married man.
Although dozens of his stories are available in anthologies, one of the interesting things about his literary career is that, as he became better known (but before the Nobel Prize), translations of his stories were frequently published in popular magazines such as "Playboy" and "Esquire." These magazines were quite anxious to raise their literary reputation by publishing Singer, and he in turn found them to be appropriate outlets for his work.
Throughout the 1960s, Singer continued to write on questions of personal morality, and was the target of scathing criticism from many quarters during this time, some of it for not being "moral" enough, some for writing stories that no one wanted to hear. To his critics he replied, "Literature must spring from the past, from the love of the uniform force that wrote it, and not from the uncertainty of the future."[citation needed]
Singer was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1978[13].
One of his most famous novels (due to a popular movie remake) was Enemies, a Love Story in which a Holocaust survivor deals with his own desires, complex family relationships, and a loss of faith. Singer's feminist story "Yentl" has had a wide impact on culture since its conversion into popular movie starring Barbra Streisand. Perhaps the most fascinating Singer-inspired film is 1974's Mr. Singer's Nightmare or Mrs. Pupkos Beard by Bruce Davidson, a renowned photographer who became Singer's neighbor. This unique film is a half-hour mixture of documentary and fantasy for which Singer not only wrote the script but played the leading role.
Singer's relationship to Judaism, which was complex and unconventional, evades description because he did not write very much directly about it. On the other hand, he often employs first-person narrators in his fiction that are clearly meant to represent him personally.
He regarded himself as a skeptic and a loner, though he felt a connection to his orthodox roots. Ultimately, he developed a view of religion and philosophy, which he called "private mysticism: Since God was completely unknown and eternally silent, He could be endowed with whatever traits one elected to hang upon Him."[14][15]
Singer was brought up in an Orthodox household, where he learned all the Jewish prayers, studied Hebrew, and learned Torah and Talmud. But as he recounts in the autobiographical ' 'In My Father's Court ' ', he broke away from his parents in his early twenties and began spending time with non-religious Bohemian artists in Warsaw (influenced by his older brother, who had done the same). Although he clearly believed in a monotheistic God (as in traditional Judaism), he stopped attending Jewish religious services of any kind, even on the High Holy Days. His vegetarianism, which he adopted in 1962 when he had the means to do so[3], and which became a very important part of his later life, can also be seen as a way of avoiding the question of Kosher food. He struggled throughout his life with the realization that a kind and compassionate God would never inflict the massive suffering he saw around him, especially the Holocaust deaths of the Polish Jews he grew up with. In one interview with the photographer Richard Kaplan, he said, "I am angry at God because of what happened to my brother [his older brother died, suddenly, in February 1944, in New York, of a thrombosis, his younger brother perished in Soviet Russia ca. 1945, after being deported with his mother and wife to Southern Kazakhstan." In one story, however, his narrator tells a woman, "If you believe in God, then he exists."
Despite all these complexities in his religious outlook, Singer lived in the midst of the Jewish community throughout his life. He did not seem to be comfortable unless he was surrounded by Jews; particularly Jews born in Europe. Although he spoke English, Hebrew, and Polish quite fluently, he always considered Yiddish his natural tongue, he always wrote in Yiddish and he was the last famous American author writing in this language. After he had achieved success as a writer in New York, Singer and his wife began spending time during the winters with the Jewish community in Miami. Eventually, as senior citizens, they moved to Miami and identified closely with the European Jewish community: a street was named after him long before he died. I.B. Singer was buried in a traditional Jewish ceremony in a Jewish cemetery.
Especially in his short fiction, he often writes about Jews of various kinds who are having religious struggles; sometimes these struggles become quite violent, resulting in death or mental illness. In one story he meets a young woman in New York whom he knew from an Orthodox family in Poland. She has become a kind of hippy, sings American folk music with a guitar, and rejects Judaism, although the narrator comments that in many ways she seems typically Jewish. The narrator says that he often meets Jews who think they are anything but Jewish, and yet still are.
In the end, Singer remains an unquestionably Jewish writer, yet his precise views about Jews, Judaism, and the Jewish God are open to much interpretation. Whatever they are, they lie at the center of his literary art.
Singer was a prominent vegetarian[16] for the last 35 years of his life and often included vegetarian themes in his works. In his short story, The Slaughterer, he described the anguish of an appointed slaughterer trying to reconcile his compassion for animals with his job of killing them. He felt that the ingestion of meat was a denial of all ideals and all religions: "How can we speak of right and justice if we take an innocent creature and shed its blood?" When asked if he had become a vegetarian for health reasons, he replied: "I did it for the health of the chickens."
In The Letter Writer, he wrote "In relation to [animals], all people are Nazis; for the animals, it is an eternal Treblinka" [2].
In the preface to Steven Rosen's "Food for Spirit: Vegetarianism and the World Religions" (1986), Singer wrote, "When a human kills an animal for food, he is neglecting his own hunger for justice. Man prays for mercy, but is unwilling to extend it to others. Why should man then expect mercy from God? It's unfair to expect something that you are not willing to give. It is inconsistent. I can never accept inconsistency or injustice. Even if it comes from God. If there would come a voice from God saying, "I'm against vegetarianism!" I would say, "Well, I am for it!" This is how strongly I feel in this regard."
Note: the publication years in the following list refer to English translations, not the Yiddish originals (which often predate their translations by ten or twenty years).
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| The Spinoza of Market Street (Sources) (story) | |
| Gimpel the Fool (Further Reading) (story) | |
| Great Writers: Isaac Bashevis Singer (2001 Language & Literature Film) |
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