Jacob Gordin was the first major playwright of the Golden Age of New Yorks Yiddish theater, which was not just entertainment but also a public forum, a force for education and acculturation, and a battleground for ideologies and artistic credos. Gordin, like his audience, was a Russian ?migr?. His most successful and scandalous dramas--The Jewish King Lear, The Kreutzer Sonata, and Khasye the Orphan--were based on works by Lev Tolstoy and Ivan Turgenev, and reflected a profoundly Jewish means of using literature to salvage a lost land.
Gordins life and his plays held out the tantalizing possibility that by changing the story of ones past, one could write ones own future. Through a detailed examination of Gordins career in Russia, Barbara Henry dismantles the fictive radical background he invented for himself. In doing so, she illuminates the continuities among his Russian fiction and journalism, his work as a controversial Jewish religious reformer, and his Yiddish plays.
AcknowledgementsNote on Transliteration
Introduction
1. Amerika
2. In the Old Country: The Reformer
3. A Russian Writer
4. The Perils of Performance: Di kreytser sonata (1902)
5. Don't Look Back: Orphan in the