East River
Sholem Asch
1946
The Triangle firm was housed in a modern building, practically a skyscraper, situated on the edge of the enormous open square in the heart of the city. The factory took up several floors of the building. The offices, showrooms, and cutting rooms were on the lower floors. On the ninth floor about two hundred and thirty girls and a few men worked at…
Creator Bio
Sholem Asch
The famous and highly successful Yiddish novelist and dramatist Sholem Asch was born in Kutno in Russian-ruled Poland into a Hasidic family. Self-educated in European literature, Asch moved to Warsaw and began to write Hebrew and Yiddish fiction under Y. L. Peretz’s tutelage. In 1904–1905, having switched decisively to Yiddish, Asch won wide approbation for his first novel A shtetl, which moved readers with its deeply romanticized portrait of a smalltown life in which Jews and non-Jews, people of all classes, and humans and nature are bound together into one harmonious whole. Three years later, already a noted contributor to the still-fledgling Yiddish drama scene, Asch caused a scandal with his provocative drama Got fun nekome (God of Vengeance), which centers on a Jewish brothel owner in Warsaw who strives and fails to maintain separate worlds of piety and procuring while a connection is forged between his daughter and one of the brothel’s sex workers—a connection that famously constituted the first scene of lesbian love in Yiddish letters. Ideologically, Asch combined strong Yiddishist commitments, joining Peretz in championing Yiddish as the primary language of modern Jewish culture, with broad and apolitical support for Jewish national vitality, including the developing Yishuv in Palestine. Leading a peripatetic life that brought him from the Russian Empire to the United States to the new Polish state and back to the United States, Asch achieved a level of fame and attention beyond the Jewish world unusual for Yiddish writers; he would expand his focus to include American Jewish life and, controversially, the life of Jesus and his circle in Roman Palestine. The New Testament themes of his 1939–1949 trilogy The Nazarene, The Apostle, and Mary—as well as his choice to first publish the later volumes in English—offended some Yiddish readers. Asch spent the end of his life in Bat Yam, Israel.
Related Guide
Jewish Writing in the Postwar United States
Jewish American writers gained mainstream success writing about immigrant experience, assimilation, and the trauma of the Holocaust.
Related Guide
Jewish Culture in the Postwar United States
American Jews entered a "golden age" of cultural expression and self-confidence after World War II, with declining antisemitism and increasing political and cultural representation.