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Arrogant Beggar - CL
 
 

Arrogant Beggar - CL [Hardcover]

Anzia Yezierska , Anzia Yezierska , Yezierska

Price: CDN$ 75.14 & this item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping. Details
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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 192 pages
  • Publisher: Duke University Press (February 1996)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0822317524
  • ISBN-13: 978-0822317524
  • Product Dimensions: 21.6 x 15.6 x 2 cm
  • Shipping Weight: 463 g

Product Description

From Publishers Weekly

This realistic, socially conscious, occasionally overly romantic novel by Yezierska (1880-1970) chronicles the adventures of narrator Adele Lindner, who exposes the hypocrisy of the charitably run Hellman Home for Working Girls (read the Clara de Hirsch Home) after fleeing from the poverty of the Lower East Side. In the seemingly picture-perfect institution, Adele's eyes are opened. She wants to be seen as an equal, but her benefactress instead sees her as a servant girl, someone whose role, she is told later, "consists in serving others." Later, after leaving the home and founding a restaurant, Adele is able to practice philanthropy the way she feels it should be practiced. On its publication in 1927, this book was criticized for its sarcastic attacks on boarding institutions. Though dated and sometimes melodramatic, particularly where Adele's romance with her benefactress's son is concerned, the social commentary about Jewish class and ethnic tensions still rings true. Fast-paced, the book brings to life the teeming activity of the Lower East Side with both passion and careful attention to detail.

Copyright 1996 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

Review

OWhile YezierskaOs writing stands in sharp contrast to the quantity of fiction by middle- and upper-class white women writers so prevalent in the late nineteenth century and early twentieth, what is particularly interesting about Arrogant Beggar is that it focuses more directly on class than do most of her novels. Katherine StubbsOs introduction is comprehensive, helpful, beautifully written, and convincingNa model of scholarship and insight.ONLinda Wagner-Martin, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Amazon.com: 4.5 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)

5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars No Quiet on the Class Warfare Front, Jun 1 2008
By Customer Formerly Known as Giordano Bruno - Published on Amazon.com
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This review is from: Arrogant Beggar - PB (Paperback)
Anzia Yezierska published her one great novel, Bread Givers, in 1925. It's a seemingly autobiographical account of the struggle for assimilation and for independence from a reactionary father of a Jewish immigrant girl in New York City, and it's quite a piece of work, innovative, fiery, and at times funny, the most powerful novel of urban immigration ever written. This novel, Arrogant Beggar, published in 1927, is also a first-person narrative, but the narrator is an American-born orphan, and the story begins when she is already "formed" and seeking a career.

Let's caution everyone posthaste that Arrogant Beggar is not a literary masterpiece. The writing is modest at best, awkward at times, and awful toward the end. The story is effectively ruined by clumsy inprobabilities and coincidences. The chief male character, Arthur Hellman, is implausible and artificial. There's no suspense and little enough humor. Nevertheless, I recommend it highly for its historical and sociological interest. Adele Lindner, the heroine, makes up for the implausibility of all the other characters by her intensely believable presence. Whether "Adele" is a characterological self-portrait of Anzia Yezierska doesn't much matter. Adele is a stunning revelation of lower-class consciousness in America in the early 20th Century, a spokesperson for the pride of the poor in the face of social condescension. The book was received by contemporaries as a devastating work of social criticism, specifically of Progressive and Social Gospel inspired charities such as the "boardinghouse for poor girls who might aspire to be young ladies but had better recognize their destiny as domestics" where Adele resides for the first half of the narrative. Obviously the reception was hostile.

To quote the book jacket, "the second half of the novel takes Adele back to her ghetto origins as she explores an alternate model of philanthropy by opening a restaurant that combines the communitarian traditions of Old World shetl traditions with the contingencies of New World capitalism." Close enough, but the second half is largely utopian fantasy and lacks the biting pertinence of the first half, with Adele's painful thin-skinned love/hate tussle with gentility.

Was class consciousness, in a European sense, ever part of American society? Was class warfare really a likelihood before the New Deal? This book can be considered a primary source for historians, academic or armchair, who want to taste and smell poverty as the poor tasted and smelled it.

0 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Better than expected, Feb 10 2008
By Leslie Stickler - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Arrogant Beggar - PB (Paperback)
This book arrived in about a week and was in BETTER condition than advertised. Overall, I was satisfied with the transaction and would purchase from this seller again.
 Go to Amazon.com to see both reviews  4.5 out of 5 stars 

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