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Lea Goldberg
(Germany, 1911)
In 1935 she settled in Tel Aviv where she became one of Israel's leading intellectuals and poets. She joined the staffs of the newspapers Ha’aretz and Davar and became children books' editor of Sifriyat Po'alim publishing house, as well as as literary consultant to the Habima theater and theater critic for the Al Ha-Mishmar journal. Goldberg was the founder of the Department of Comparative Literature at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem (which she chaired from 1952 until her death). A prolific and versatile writer, Lea Goldberg's work includes lyrical poetry, literary criticism, books for children, and translations of European classics into Hebrew. Goldberg translated numerous foreign works into Hebrew, using her excellent knowledge of 7 languages. These include works of modernist Russian poets and translations from the Italian. She was also one of Israel's most successful children's writers with 20 popular works to her credit. Two entire generations of Israeli youth have grown up on her stories and poems. Her poetry for adults deals mainly with childhood, love, aging and death; it is highly personal, introspective, and modern in its understated (and often starkly simple) tone. Goldberg's poems often speak about loneliness and broken relationships, with a tragic intonation, originating, some say, in her own loneliness. Some of her subjects are deeply entrenched in western culture (for instance, the Odyssey); she also used Jewish themes. She wrote too about nature, with a longing that produced perhaps some of her best-known and loved poems. Although she sometimes chose to write poems that do not rhyme (especially in her later period), she always respected formal verse; moreover, in the sonnet sequence "The Love of Theresa di Meun", about the love of a fictitious married Italian noblewoman for a younger tutor, Goldberg adopted complex rhyming schemes.
Last updated: Mar 30, 2006
Poems
'TO A PICTURE OF MY MOTHER' from 'PRAYERS OF ATONEMENT' 'PINE' Interesting articles Lea Goldberg and her poetry Selected Bibliography You Will Walk in the Fields (poems and songs) [At telkhi ba-sade: shirim u-manginot], Sifriyat Po'alim, Tel Aviv 1989 Lady of the castle: a dramatic episode in three (play), [Ba'alat ha-armon: epizoda dramatit be-shalosh ma'arakhot] Sifriat Poalim, Merhavya 1956 Lady of the castle: a dramatic episode in three, translated from the Hebrew by T. Carmi, The Institute for the Translation of Hebrew Literature, Tel Aviv 1974 Light on the rim of a cloud; 14 poems by the Hebrew poet Lea Goldberg, English version by Rama Commanday, Didymus Press, San Francisco 1972 Encounter with a Poet (non-fiction) [Pgisha 'im meshorer: 'al Avraham Ben Yitshak Sona], Sifriyat Po'alim, Merhavya 1952 Room for rent (children) Pictures by Avner Katz, Ward Ritchie Press, Los Angeles 1972 Russian literature in the nineteenth century: essays, Translated into English by Hillel Halkin, Magnes Press, Hebrew University, Jerusalem 1976 Selected poems, Translated and introduced by Robert Friend; foreword by Yehuda Amichai; afterword by Gershom Scholem Menard Press, London, Panjandrum Press, San Francisco 1976 Links Short biography of Lea Goldberg and links Language: Catalan Page on Lea Goldberg by the Institute for the Translation of Hebrew Literature Language: English Three songs by Lea Goldberg for female voice and piano (audio) Language: English On Lea Goldberg in the Wikipedia Free Encyclopedia Language: English Two Songs to the Rivers, two poems by Lea Goldberg Language: English An article on Israeli Poetry and Literature Language: French Short biography of Lea Goldberg Language: German Poems of Lea Goldberg in Polish Language: Polish Short biography of Lea Goldberg Language: Russian A poem of Lea Goldberg in Spanish translation Language: Spanish Poems on Jerusalem by Lea Goldberg and other Israeli poets Language: Spanish A poem of Lea Goldberg in Spanish translation Language: Spanish |
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