Monday, August 19, 2019
Cynthia Ozick Essay -- Biography Biographies Bio
Cynthia Ozick (1928 - â⬠¦.)   Cynthia Ozick was born in New York City on April 17, 1928. She was the second of two children. Her parents, Celia (Regelson) and Wiliam Ozick immigrated to the US from the northwest region of Russia. The family came from the Litvak (Lithuanian) Jewish tradition which was a tradition of skepticism, rationalism and antimysticism.  Her parents owned a pharmacy in Pelham Bay section of Bronx. They worked very hard, usually fourteen hours a day. Cynthia delivered perscriptions sometimes. Her mother was a generous, lavish, exuberant woman full of laughter whereas her father was a discreet, quiet man. He was also a Jewish scholar, and knew Latin and German.   When she was five and a half, her grandmother took her to ââ¬Å"hederâ⬠, for Yiddish-Hebrew religios instruction. The rabbi told Ozickââ¬â¢s grandmother to take her home because a girl did not have to study. But her grandmother brought her back the very next day and insisted that she was to be accepted. Ozick is grateful to her grandmother for that instince and dates back her feminism to that time.   She describes the Pelham Bay section of Bronx as a lovely place but it was ââ¬Å"brutually difficult to be a Jewâ⬠ there. She remembers having stones thrown at her or being called as Cristââ¬â¢s killer. At home and at the ââ¬Å"hederâ⬠ she was considered intelligent but she was particularly uncomfortable in school because she did not want to sing Christmas carols and was humiliated for that. She felt inadequate and tells that she suffered ââ¬Å" a wormlike childhood in grade schoolâ⬠.  But she was excellent in grammar, spelling, reading and writing. And to run away from the dreariness of being different, she dedicated herself to the world of books. She began reading with her older brotherââ¬â¢s...              ...d."  She has turned 80 earlier this year and has won not one but two lifetime achievement awards. In April 2008, she was receved the PEN/Malamud Award for short fiction and the PEN/Nabakov Award for ââ¬Å"enduring originality and consummate craftmanshipâ⬠.   Bibliography:  Trust ââ¬â novel, 1966  The Pagan Rabbi ââ¬â stories, 1971  Bloodshed ââ¬â novellas, 1976  Levitation ââ¬â fictions, 1982  Art & Ardor ââ¬â essays, 1983  The Canibal Galaxy ââ¬â novel, 1983  The Messiah of Stockholm ââ¬â novel, 1987  Metaphor &Memory ââ¬â essays, 1989  The Shawl ââ¬â stories, 1989  Fame & Folly ââ¬â essays, 1996  The Puttermesser Papers ââ¬â novel, 1997  Quarrel & Quandry ââ¬â essays, 2000  Heir to the Glimmering World ââ¬â novel, 2004  The Din in the Head ââ¬â essays, 2006  Dictation ââ¬â stories, 2008   Souces:   www.reaaward.org  www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org  www.complete-review.com   www.myjewishlearning.com   www.guardian.co.uk                      
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