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Yekl: A Tale of the New York Ghetto - Paperback
Yekl: A Tale of the New York Ghetto - Paperback
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by Abraham Cahan (Author)
First published in 1896, Yekl by Abraham Cahan offers one of the earliest and most vivid literary portraits of immigrant life in New York's Lower East Side.
The story follows Jake-known among his fellow immigrants as Yekl-a Jewish immigrant who has embraced the outward habits of American life while remaining caught between the traditions of the Old World and the expectations of the new. When his wife Gitl unexpectedly arrives from Eastern Europe, accompanied by their young son, the fragile identity Jake has constructed for himself begins to unravel.
Cahan's narrative captures the tensions of cultural transition experienced by thousands of immigrants at the end of the nineteenth century. Through the lives of Jake, Gitl, and their community, the novel explores themes of assimilation, identity, language, and the emotional costs of adapting to a new society.
Written with sympathy and sharp observation, Yekl stands as an important early work of American immigrant literature. Its depiction of the crowded tenements, bustling streets, and complex cultural life of the Lower East Side remains a significant document of the immigrant experience in the United States.
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