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- Q17018388 description "Yiddish-language writer".
- Q17018388 description "Yiddish-language writer".
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- Q17018388 abstract "Yente Serdatzky (Serdatsky) (15 September 1877 – 1 May 1962) was a Jewish-American Yiddish-language writer.Serdatzky was born as Yente Raybman, in Aleksat (Aleksotas), near Kovno (Kaunas), Lithuania (then in the Russian Empire), the daughter of a used furniture dealer who was also a scholar. She received a secular as well as a basic Jewish education, and learned German, Russian, and Hebrew. The family home was a gathering place for Yiddish writers around Kovno, including Avrom Reyzen, and in this way she became acquainted with contemporary Yiddish literature.Serdatzky married and had three children, and eventually ran her own grocery store. In 1905, the year of the Russian Revolution, she took the radical step of leaving her family and moving to Warsaw, to pursue her writing. There she came into contact with the literary circle around I. L. Peretz. She had her literary debut with the story "Mirl," published in the Yiddish daily newspaper Der Veg (The Way), of which Peretz was the literary editor. She received encouragement from Peretz, and published further work in that paper.In 1907 Serdatzky emigrated to the United States. After living initially in Chicago, she settled in New York City, where she supported herself at first by running a soup kitchen. She published short stories, sketches, and one-act plays in Yiddish periodicals including Fraye arbeter shtime (Free Voice of Labor), Fraye gezelshaft (Free Society), Tsukunft (Future), Dos naye Land (The New Land), and Fraynd (Friend). She also published stories regularly in the Forverts (The Forward), and became a contributing editor there.In 1922, following a disagreement with Forverts editor Abraham Cahan, Serdatzky was dismissed from the staff. After that she dropped out of the literary scene, and supported herself in part by renting rooms. Much later in her life, from 1949 to 1955, she published over 30 stories in Isaac Liebman's Nyu-yorker vokhnblat (New York weekly paper).Abraham Cahan described Serdatzky in 1914 as a successful writer of "tales of real life." The characters in her fiction are often women like herself, immigrants and intellectuals, inspired by left-wing political ideals, while facing disappointment in their everyday lives and relationships. Her stories at times convey a sense of "pervasive loneliness."Serdatzky's only book publication was Geklibene shriftn (Collected writings), published in New York by the Hebrew Publishing Company, in 1913.".
- Q17018388 alias "Yente Raybman".
- Q17018388 birthDate "1877-09-15".
- Q17018388 birthYear "1877".
- Q17018388 deathDate "1962-05-01".
- Q17018388 deathYear "1962".
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- Q17018388 alternativeNames "Yente Raybman".
- Q17018388 dateOfBirth "1877-09-15".
- Q17018388 dateOfDeath "1962-05-01".
- Q17018388 name "Serdatzky, Yente".
- Q17018388 shortDescription "Yiddish-language writer".
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- Q17018388 comment "Yente Serdatzky (Serdatsky) (15 September 1877 – 1 May 1962) was a Jewish-American Yiddish-language writer.Serdatzky was born as Yente Raybman, in Aleksat (Aleksotas), near Kovno (Kaunas), Lithuania (then in the Russian Empire), the daughter of a used furniture dealer who was also a scholar. She received a secular as well as a basic Jewish education, and learned German, Russian, and Hebrew.".
- Q17018388 label "Yente Serdatzky".
- Q17018388 givenName "Yente".
- Q17018388 name "Serdatzky, Yente".
- Q17018388 name "Yente Serdatzky".
- Q17018388 surname "Serdatzky".