Tradition and revolution. In search of roots: Uri Zvi Grinberg's Albatros
Keywords:
Greenberg, Uri Zvi, 1896-1981, Poets, Israeli, Poets, Jewish, Jewish poetry, Hebrew poetry, Yiddish poetry, Expressionism, Symbolism in literature, ArtAbstract
Although Uri Zvi Grinberg had published poetry in both Hebrew and Yiddish from 1912 onward, it was with the appearance of the Yiddish volume Mefisto in 1921 and his Albatros in 1922–1923 that the new idiom, expressionism was introduced. In seeking to explain the transformation of Uri Zvi Grinberg from a minor romantic lyric poet in Yiddish and Hebrew into an Expressionist bard who emerged in the 1921 Mefisto, critics have advanced a number of elaborate and sometimes contradictory theories. His own special “creative force” in interplay with the highly eclectic dynamic of Yiddish modernism, spurred a turning point, which witnessed the return of his artistic attention, as of his confreres to the realities of the phenomenal world, in confrontation with symbolism (aestetic romanticist) and impressionist art.How to Cite
Winther, J. (1997). Tradition and revolution. In search of roots: Uri Zvi Grinberg’s Albatros. Nordisk judaistik/Scandinavian Jewish Studies, 18(1-2), 130–158. https://doi.org/10.30752/nj.69545
Copyright (c) 1997 Judith Winther
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.