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==Literary influences==
==Literary influences==
>
Amichai traced his beginnings as a poetry lover to when he was stationed with the British army in [[Egypt]]. There he happened to find an anthology of modern British poetry, and the works of [[Dylan Thomas]], [[T. S. Eliot]], and [[W. H. Auden]] included in that book inspired his first thoughts about becoming a writer. Amichai began writing poetry in 1946, at age 22. He also changed his name to Yehuda Amichai around that same time. In her biography of Amichai, literary critic Nili Scharf Gold writes that the idea for the name change, as well as the name "Amichai", came from his girlfriend, "Ruth Z.", who soon broke up with him and moved to the [[United States]]. Amichai said he started writing poetry in 1948 as a way of hiding this part of his life from the public record.<ref name="haaretz"/>
" Amichai traced his beginnings as a poetry lover to when he was stationed with the British army in Egypt. There he happened to find an anthology of modern British poetry, and the works of Dylan Thomas, T. S. Eliot, and W. H. Auden included in that book inspired his first thoughts about becoming a writer. . He changed his name to Yehuda Amichai around that same time. In her biography of Amichai, literary critic Nili Scharf Gold writes that the idea for the name change, as well as the name "Amichai", came from his girlfriend, Ruth Herman., who moved to the United states and than married Mr. Zilentziger .Cotrary to Golds claim , Amichai said in an Intervew it was his idea to choose the name Amichai," it was common at that time to change (foreign) names into Hebrew names…."Amichai" was a right name, because it was Socialist, Zionist and optimistic."


………………….
Gold also believes that a childhood trauma in Germany had an impact on his later poetry: he had an argument with a childhood friend, Ruth Hanover, that caused her to bicycle home angrily; she fell and as a result had to get her leg amputated. Several years later, she was unable to join the rest of her family, who fled the [[Nazi]] takeover, due to her missing leg, and ended up being killed in [[Holocaust]]. Amichai occasionally referred to her in his poems as "Little Ruth".<ref name="haaretz">[http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1051956.html Openclosedopenclosedopen], ''[[Haaretz]]''</ref>In Amichai's diary<ref>Diary, 11.12.1990, at The Beinecke Library</ref> and in an interview he gave in 1978, the incident is recounted without comment: "There was a girl who studied with me in my class, and in 1934 or 1935 she rode her bicycle and one of her legs was amputated in an accident." <ref>Dan Omer,"Baretz Hazot milim tzricht lhiot tzel" interview with Amichai, ''Proza'', no.25 (July 1978 4-5.</ref>


[15] The only influence this event had on his poetry is only one poem "“The Rustle of History’s Wings”, As They Used to Say" in which he wrote: "... For five shillings I exchanged the exile name of my fathers for a proud Hebrew name that suited hers.
Gold's main contention, not entirely convincing to some, is that Amichai felt he needed to cover up the depth of his involvement with his German childhood and his love of German literature in order to become a good Israeli citizen and a national poet. <ref>[http://209.85.229.132/search?q=cache:Xa7MpQ2olWIJ:heroic-media.com/jq/2009/03/yehuda-amichai-the-making-of-israel%E2%80%99s-national-poet/+nili+scharf+gold+amichai&cd=12&hl=en&ct=clnk The Making of an Israeli Poet]</ref>


That whore ran off to America and married a man, a spice dealer, pepper, cinnamon, and cardamom, leaving me with my new name and with the war" [16]
Robert Alter and Boas Arpaly are critical of Gold's conclusions. Alter wrote: "Again and again Gold asks why Amichai did not represent his German childhood in his poetry, except fragmentarily and obliquely. The inconvenient fact that his major novel, ''Not of This time, Not of This Place'', devotes elaborate attention to Wurzburg (which is given the fictional name Weinburg) is not allowed to trouble Gold's thesis of suppression, because the book is fiction, not poetry, and hence is thought somehow to belong to a different category in regard to the writer relation to his early years. But Gold's notion of Amichai's 'poetics of camouflage' rests on an entirely unexamined assumption that it is the task of the poet to represent his life directly and in full…" <ref>[http://www.tnr.com/article/books/only-man Robert Alter, "Only a Man" ''The New Republic'', December 31, 2008]</ref>


Gold also believes that a childhood trauma in Germany had an impact on his later poetry: he had an argument with a childhood friend, Ruth Hanover, that caused her to bicycle home angrily; she fell and as a result had to get her leg amputated. Several years later, she was unable to join the rest of her family, who fled the Nazi takeover, due to her missing leg, and ended up being killed in the Holocaust. Amichai occasionally referred to her in his poems as "Little Ruth".[17]
Boas Arpaly wrote: "Amichai did not hide in his poetry the fact that he was an immigrant and a son of immigrants, but he chose to tell the story of his childhood in his hometown, in his novel "Not Of This Time, Not of This Place" and like any other writer he decided which material of his life would become material to his poetry... Did Amichai want to become a national poet?...his poetry embodied a silent but piercing revolution against the social and political institutions that enslave the life and happiness of the individual for their need... All the things that Gold thinks he was hiding were not in any contrast to the unique "nationality" embodied in his poetry. Since Alterman there has not been a poet more popular than Amichai. In this, he is unique. He is probably the only canonic poet read by so many, also by people that do not belong to the literary community. <ref>Boas Arpaly "Patuach Patuach" Haaretz, January 16,2009</ref>

In an interview, Amichai described the incident: "There was a girl who studied with me in my class, and in 1934 or 1935 she rode her bicycle and one of her legs was amputated in an accident" [18] In his notebook, cotrary to Gold's unsorced version, Amichai wrote, "I remember that in 1934 little Ruth accident happened. DAYS before, we argued a little because I gave up easily the leading part of Yehuda Maccabi in the school show and the son of the headmaster got it. She argued that I had to fight more and not to give up immediately". [19] In Amichai words- the accident happened days after the argument between him and "little Rute" and not immediatly after their argument.So there is no connection between the argument and the accident as Gold unsorced presentation of the accident.


Robert Alter and Boas Arpaly wrote about Gold's contention: "Again and again Gold asks why Amichai did not represent his German childhood in his poetry, except fragmentarily and obliquely. The inconvenient fact that his major novel , Not of This time, Not of This Place ,devotes elaborate attention to Wurzburg(which is given the fictional name Weinburg) is not allowed to trouble Gold's thesis of suppression, because the book is fiction, not poetry, and hence is thought somehow to belong to a different category in regard to the writer relation to his early years. But Gold's notion of Amicai's 'poetics of camouflage' rests on an entirely unexamined assumption- that it is the task of the poet to represent his life directly and in full…" Alter, Robert (December 31, 2008), "Only A Man The New Republic. And Boas Arpaly wrote: "Amichai did not hide in his poetry the fact that he was an immigrant and a son of immigrants, but he chose to tell the story of his childhood in his hometown , in his novel "Not Of This Time, Not of This Place" and like any other writer he decided which material of his life will become material to his poetry.. " Did Amichai want to become a national poet?...his poetry embodied a silent but piercing revolution against the social and political institutions that enslave the life and happiness of the individual for their need- He should bother so much to build for himself the mythology of a national poet? All the things that Gold thinks he was hiding were not in any contrast to the unique "nationality" embodied in his poetry. I did not find in Gold's book an explanation to the concept 'national poet' but in the first place this concept appears in her book she is pointing to my article(1997) that says:' of all the poets who began to at the time of Amichai, or in later years, since Alterman there was not a poet more popular than Amichai. In this he is unique. He is probably the only canonic poet read by so many, also by people that do not belong to the Literary Community. In this matter he has no rivals. From this aspect, at least, he may be considered a national poet , a title that does not suite him from any other point of view… Gold's use of that title is not clear and not responsible." Boas Arpaly "Patuach Patuach" Haaretz, January 16,2009"


==Critical acclaim==
==Critical acclaim==

Revision as of 06:47, 9 February 2010

Yehuda Amichai
File:Yehuda amichai.jpg
Born(1924-05-03)3 May 1924
Died22 September 2000(2000-09-22) (aged 76)

Yehuda Amichai (Hebrew: יהודה עמיחי; born Ludwig Pfeuffer; May 3, 1924 – September 22, 2000) was an Israeli poet. Amichai is considered by many, both in Israel and internationally, as Israel's greatest modern poet.[1] He was also one of the first to write in colloquial Hebrew.[2]

Biography

Amichai was born in Würzburg, Germany, to an Orthodox Jewish family, and was raised speaking both Hebrew and German.[3]

Amichai immigrated with his family at the age of 12 to Petah Tikva in Mandate Palestine in 1935, moving to Jerusalem in 1936.[4] He was a member of the Palmach, the strike force of the Haganah, the defence force of the Jewish community in pre-state Israel. As a young man he volunteered and fought in World War II as a member of the British Army Jewish Brigade, and in the Negev on the southern front in the Israeli War of Independence.[4]

After the War of Independence, Amichai studied Bible and Hebrew literature at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Encouraged by one of his professors at Hebrew University, he published his first book of poetry, "Now and in Other Days," in 1955.[5] In 1956, Amichai served in the Sinai War, and in 1973 he served in the Yom Kippur War.[6]Amichai published his first novel, Not of This Time, Not of This Place, in 1963. It was about a young German Jew in Israel after World War II, trying to make sense of the world that created the Holocaust. His second novel, Mi Yitneni Malon, about an Israeli poet living in New York, was published in 1971 while Amichai was a visiting professor at the University of California, Berkeley. He was a poet in residence at New York University in 1987.[7]For many years, he taught literature in Israeli high schools.[8]

Amichai was married twice, first to Tamar Horn, with whom he had one son, and then to Chana Sokolov; they had one son and one daughter. His two sons were Ron and David, and his daughter was Emmanuella.[9]

He died of cancer in 2000, at age 76.

Poetry

Amichai's poetry deals with issues of day-to-day life, and also with philosophical issues of the meaning of life and death. His work is characterized by gentle irony and original, often surprising imagery. Like many secular Israeli poets, he struggles with religious faith. His poems are full of references to God and the religious experience.[10]Some of his imagery was accused of being sacrilegious.[11] In his poem "And this is Your Glory" (Vehi Tehilatekha), for example, God is sprawled under the globe like a mechanic under a car, futilely trying to repair it. In the poem "Gods Change, Prayers Stay the Same" (Elim Mithalfim, ha-Tfillot Nisharot la-Ad), God is a portrayed as a tour guide or magician. [12]

Language and poetic style

In an interview published in the American Poetry Review, Amichai spoke about his command of Hebrew: "I grew up in a very religious household...So the prayers, the language of prayer itself became a kind of natural language for me...I don't try —like sometimes poets do —to 'enrich' poetry by getting more cultural material or more ethnic material into it. It comes very naturally."[13]Robert Alter describes Amichai's poetry as a "play of sound." He "builds a strong momentum that moves in free association from word to word, the sounds virtually generating the words that follow in the syntactic chain through phonetic kinship."[14]

Literary influences

> " Amichai traced his beginnings as a poetry lover to when he was stationed with the British army in Egypt. There he happened to find an anthology of modern British poetry, and the works of Dylan Thomas, T. S. Eliot, and W. H. Auden included in that book inspired his first thoughts about becoming a writer. . He changed his name to Yehuda Amichai around that same time. In her biography of Amichai, literary critic Nili Scharf Gold writes that the idea for the name change, as well as the name "Amichai", came from his girlfriend, Ruth Herman., who moved to the United states and than married Mr. Zilentziger .Cotrary to Golds claim , Amichai said in an Intervew it was his idea to choose the name Amichai," it was common at that time to change (foreign) names into Hebrew names…."Amichai" was a right name, because it was Socialist, Zionist and optimistic."

………………….

[15] The only influence this event had on his poetry is only one poem "“The Rustle of History’s Wings”, As They Used to Say" in which he wrote: "... For five shillings I exchanged the exile name of my fathers for a proud Hebrew name that suited hers.

That whore ran off to America and married a man, a spice dealer, pepper, cinnamon, and cardamom, leaving me with my new name and with the war" [16]

Gold also believes that a childhood trauma in Germany had an impact on his later poetry: he had an argument with a childhood friend, Ruth Hanover, that caused her to bicycle home angrily; she fell and as a result had to get her leg amputated. Several years later, she was unable to join the rest of her family, who fled the Nazi takeover, due to her missing leg, and ended up being killed in the Holocaust. Amichai occasionally referred to her in his poems as "Little Ruth".[17]

In an interview, Amichai described the incident: "There was a girl who studied with me in my class, and in 1934 or 1935 she rode her bicycle and one of her legs was amputated in an accident" [18] In his notebook, cotrary to Gold's unsorced version, Amichai wrote, "I remember that in 1934 little Ruth accident happened. DAYS before, we argued a little because I gave up easily the leading part of Yehuda Maccabi in the school show and the son of the headmaster got it. She argued that I had to fight more and not to give up immediately". [19] In Amichai words- the accident happened days after the argument between him and "little Rute" and not immediatly after their argument.So there is no connection between the argument and the accident as Gold unsorced presentation of the accident.


Robert Alter and Boas Arpaly wrote about Gold's contention: "Again and again Gold asks why Amichai did not represent his German childhood in his poetry, except fragmentarily and obliquely. The inconvenient fact that his major novel , Not of This time, Not of This Place ,devotes elaborate attention to Wurzburg(which is given the fictional name Weinburg) is not allowed to trouble Gold's thesis of suppression, because the book is fiction, not poetry, and hence is thought somehow to belong to a different category in regard to the writer relation to his early years. But Gold's notion of Amicai's 'poetics of camouflage' rests on an entirely unexamined assumption- that it is the task of the poet to represent his life directly and in full…" Alter, Robert (December 31, 2008), "Only A Man The New Republic. And Boas Arpaly wrote: "Amichai did not hide in his poetry the fact that he was an immigrant and a son of immigrants, but he chose to tell the story of his childhood in his hometown , in his novel "Not Of This Time, Not of This Place" and like any other writer he decided which material of his life will become material to his poetry.. " Did Amichai want to become a national poet?...his poetry embodied a silent but piercing revolution against the social and political institutions that enslave the life and happiness of the individual for their need- He should bother so much to build for himself the mythology of a national poet? All the things that Gold thinks he was hiding were not in any contrast to the unique "nationality" embodied in his poetry. I did not find in Gold's book an explanation to the concept 'national poet' but in the first place this concept appears in her book she is pointing to my article(1997) that says:' of all the poets who began to at the time of Amichai, or in later years, since Alterman there was not a poet more popular than Amichai. In this he is unique. He is probably the only canonic poet read by so many, also by people that do not belong to the Literary Community. In this matter he has no rivals. From this aspect, at least, he may be considered a national poet , a title that does not suite him from any other point of view… Gold's use of that title is not clear and not responsible." Boas Arpaly "Patuach Patuach" Haaretz, January 16,2009"

Critical acclaim

Amichai poetry in English appeared in the first issue of "Modern Poetry in translation" edited by Daniel Weissbort and Ted Hughes in 1965. In 1966 he appeared at the Spoleto poetry festvial with Ezra Pound, W.H. Auden, Pablo Neruda and others. In 1968, he appeared at the London Poetry Festival. His first book in English, Selected Poems (1968), was translated by Assia Wevill, (Hughes' lover and mother to his daughter Shura).[15] Referring to him as "the great Israeli poet," Jonathan Wilson wrote in The New York Times that he "is one of very few contemporary poets to have reached a broad cross-section without compromising his art. He was loved by his readers worldwide...perhaps only as the Russians loved their poets in the early part of the last century. It is not hard to see why. Amichai's poems are easy on the surface and yet profound: humorous, ironic and yet full of passion, secular but God-engaged, allusive but accessible, charged with metaphor and yet remarkably concrete. Most of all, they are, like the speaking persona in his Letter of Recommendation, full of love: Oh, touch me, touch me, you good woman! / This is not a scar you feel under my shirt. / It is a letter of recommendation, folded, / from my father: / 'He is still a good boy and full of love.' "[16]

In the Times Literary Supplement, Ted Hughes wrote: "I've become more than ever convinced that Amichai is one of the biggest, most essential, most durable poetic voices of this past century - one of the most intimate, alive and human, wise, humorous, true, loving, inwardly free and resourceful, at home in every human situation. One of the real treasures."[citation needed]

Novelist Jonathan Safran Foer, who attended a reading by Amichai at Princeton University, said that Amichai had moved him.[17] Foer's wife, author Nicole Krauss, said that her novel The History of Love was inspired by Amichai's poems.[citation needed]

Amichai's poetry has been translated into 40 languages.[18]

Awards and honours

  • 1961 - Shlonsky Prize
  • 1969 - Brenner Prize
  • 1976 - Bialik Prize for literature (co-recipient with Yeshurun Keshet)[19]
  • 1981 - Wurzburg's Prize for Culture (Germany)
  • 1982 - Israel Prize for Hebrew poetry.[20][21] The prize citation read, in part: "Through his synthesis of the poetic with the everyday, Yehuda Amichai effected a revolutionary change in both the subject matter and the language of poetry."[18]
  • 1986 - Agnon Prize
  • 1994 - Malraux Prize (France)
  • 1994 - Literary Lion Award (New York)
  • 1995 - Macedonia`s Golden Wreath Award
  • 1996 - Norwegian Bjornson Poetry Award

Amichai received an Honor Citation from Assiut University, Egypt, and numerous honorary doctorates. He became an Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters (1986), and a Distinguished Associate Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (1991). His work is included in the "100 Greatest Works of Modern Jewish Literature" (2001), and in a great number of international anthologies. He was nominated for the Nobel Prize several times, but never won.[18] Tufts University English professor Jonathan Wilson wrote, "He should have won the Nobel Prize in any of the last 20 years, but he knew that as far as the Scandinavian judges were concerned, and whatever his personal politics, which were indubitably on the dovish side, he came from the wrong side of the stockade."[16]

Amichai left his archives to the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library of Yale University.[18]

Works in English

  • A Life of Poetry, 1948-1994. Selected and translated by Benjamin and Barbara Harshav. New York: HarperCollins, 1994.
  • Amen. Translated by the author and Ted Hughes. New York: Harper & Row, 1977.
  • Even a Fist Was Once an Open Palm with Fingers: Recent Poems. Selected and translated by Barbara and Benjamin Harshav. New York: HarperPerennial, 1991.
  • Exile at Home. New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1998.
  • Great Tranquility: Questions and Answers. Translated by Glenda Abramson and Tudor Parfitt. New York: Harper & Row, 1983.
  • Love Poems: A Bilingual Edition. New York: Harper & Row, 1981.
  • Not of this Time, Not of this Place. Translated by Shlomo Katz. New York: Harper & Row, 1968.
  • On New Year’s Day, Next to a House Being Built: A Poem. Knotting [England]: Sceptre Press, 1979.
  • Open Closed Open: Poems. Translated by Chana Bloch and Chana Kronfeld. New York: Harcourt, 2000. (Shortlisted for the 2001 International Griffin Poetry Prize)
  • Poems of Jerusalem: A Bilingual Edition. New York: Harper & Row, 1988.
  • Selected Poems. Translated by Assia Gutmann. London: Cape Goliard Press, 1968.
  • Selected Poems. Translated by Assia Gutmann and Harold Schimmel with the collaboration of Ted Hughes. Harmondsworth: Penguin Books, 1971.
  • Selected Poems. Edited by Ted Hughes and Daniel Weissbort. London: Faber & Faber, 2000.
  • Selected Poetry of Yehuda Amichai. Edited and translated by Chana Bloch and Stephen Mitchell. New York: Harper & Row, 1986. Newly revised and expanded edition: Berkeley: University of California Press, 1996.
  • Songs of Jerusalem and Myself. Translated by Harold Schimmel. New York: Harper & Row, 1973.
  • Time. Translated by the author with Ted Hughes. New York: Harper & Row, 1979.
  • Travels. Translated by Ruth Nevo. Toronto: Exile Editions, 1986.
  • Travels of a Latter-Day Benjamin of Tudela. Translated by Ruth Nevo. Missouri: Webster Review, 1977.
  • The World Is a Room and Other Stories. Translated by Elinor Grumet. Philadelphia: Jewish Publication Society, 1984.

See also

References

  1. ^ Yehuda Amichai criticism
  2. ^ Books and Writers: Yehuda Amichai
  3. ^ Love, War and History: Israel's Yehuda Amichai, All Things Considered, April 22, 2007
  4. ^ a b [1]
  5. ^ Yehuda Amichai papers, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library
  6. ^ [2]
  7. ^ Books and writers: Yehuda Amichai
  8. ^ Religious metaphor and its denial in the poetry of Yehuda Amichai
  9. ^ Poet of Israel's Soul, My Jewish Learning
  10. ^ Does David still play before you?: Israeli poetry and the Bible, David C. Jacobson
  11. ^ Sacrilegious Imagery in Yehuda Amichai's Poetry, Yoseph Milman, 1995, Association for Jewish Studies
  12. ^ Religious metaphor and its denial in the poetry of Yehuda Amichai
  13. ^ Poetry Foundation: Yehuda Amichai
  14. ^ Robert Alter, "Only a Man" The New Republic, December 31, 2008
  15. ^ Koren, Yehuda and Negev, Eilat A lover of Unreason: the Life and Tragic Death of Assia Wevill, Robson Books, London 2006
  16. ^ a b The God of Small Things, Jonathan Wilson, The New York Times, December 10, 2000
  17. ^ Creative writing program produces aspiring writers, The Daily Princetonian, December 6, 2004
  18. ^ a b c d Yehuda Amichai (1924-2000) (.doc file)
  19. ^ "List of Bialik Prize recipients 1933-2004 (in Hebrew), Tel Aviv Municipality website" (PDF).
  20. ^ "Israel Prize Official Site - Recipients in 1982 (in Hebrew)".
  21. ^ A Touch of Grace - Yehuda Amichai

Bibliography

  • Lapon-Kandeslshein, Essi. To Commemorate the 70th Birthday of Yehuda Amichai: A Bibliography of His Work in Translation. Ramat Gan (Israel): Institute of the Translation of Hebrew Literature, 1994.
  • Boas Arpali, The Flowers and the Urn" Amichai's Poetry - Structure, Meaning, Poetics, Hakibbutz Hameuchad, 1986
  • Yehuda Amichai: A Selection of critical essays on his writing, Hakibbutz Hameuchad, 1988
  • The Modern Hebrew Poem Itself , 2003, ISBN 0-8143-2485-1
  • Nili Scharf Gold. Yehuda Amichai: The Making of Israel's National Poet. Brandeis University Press, 2008.
  • Matt Nesvisky," Letters I wrote to you," The Jerusalem Report, December 8, 2008
  • Christian Leo, "Wischen Erinnern und Vergessen"-Jehuda Amichais Roman 'Nicht von jetzt' nicht von hier"im phiosophichen und literarischen Kontexext" Konigshausen&Neumann Wurzburg 2004
  • Dan Miron, "Yehuda Amichai-A Revolutionary With a Father" Haaretz, 3,12,14,October 2005