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Dan Pagis





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Dan Pagis (October 16, 1930 – June 29, 1986) was an Israeli poet, lecturer and Holocaust survivor.[1][2]

Dan Pagis

Biography

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Dan Pagis' poem at the Death Camp Belzec victims memorial

Dan Pagis was born in Rădăuţi, Bukovina in Romania and imprisoned as a child in a concentration campinUkraine. He escaped in 1944 and immigratedtoBritish Palestine (soon-to-be Israel) in 1946.

Pagis earned his PhD from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem where he later taught Medieval Hebrew literature.[3] His first published book of poetry was Sheon ha-Tsel ("The Shadow Clock") in 1959. In 1970 he published a major work entitled Gilgul – which may be translated as "Revolution, cycle, transformation, metamorphosis, metempsychosis," etc. Other poems include: "Written in Pencil in the Sealed Railway-Car," "Testimony, "Europe, Late," "Autobiography," and "Draft of a Reparations Agreement." Pagis knew many languages, and translated multiple works of literature.[citation needed]

Pagis died of cancer in Israel on June 29, 1986.

His most widely cited poem is "Written in Pencil in the Sealed Railway Car".

The literary scholar Nili Gold has described Dan Pagis as an example of a writer whose work reveals the influence of "Mother Tongue" oral and written culture on their Hebrew writing. She has situated Pagis in this way among a group of Hebrew-language writers that includes Yoel Hoffman, Yehuda Amichai, Natan Zach, and Aharon Appelfeld.[4]

Published works

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Poetry

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Books for children

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Non-fiction

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Books in translation

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ The Holocaust and the war of ideas, Edward Alexander, Transaction Publishers, 1994, pp. 90 ff.
  • ^ Holocaust Literature: An Encyclopedia of Writers and Their Work, S. Lillian Kremer, Taylor & Francis, 2003, pp. 913 ff.
  • ^ Dan Pagis biography & bibliography (The Institute for the Translation of Hebrew Literature) Archived 2008-03-09 at the Wayback Machine
  • ^ Gold, Nili (2001). "Betrayal of the Mother Tongue in the Creation of National Identity," in Ideology and Jewish Identity in Israeli and American Literature, ed. Emily Miller Budick. Albany: State University of New York Press. pp. 235–58.
  • Further reading

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    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dan_Pagis&oldid=1226955553"
     



    Last edited on 2 June 2024, at 19:51  





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    This page was last edited on 2 June 2024, at 19:51 (UTC).

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