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Lost in Translation A Life in a New Language
Eva Hoffman

Lost in Translation A Life in a New Language

A Life in a New Language

Penguin (Mar 01, 1990)
9780140127737
| Paperback
288 pages | 220 x 25 x 150 mm | 204 g | English
$ 17.00 | Value: $ 10.48
Dewey 973.0492402
LC Classification E184.J5 .H63 1990
LC Control No. 89023016

Subject

  • Children Of Holocaust Survivors
  • Immigrants
  • Immigrants/ United States/ Biography
  • Jews
  • Jews/ United States/ Biography

Plot

“A marvelously thoughtful book . . . It is not just about emigrants and refugees. It is about us all.” –The New York Times When her parents brought her from the war-ravaged, faded elegance of her native Cracow in 1959 to settle in well-manicured, suburban Vancouver, Eva Hoffman was thirteen years old. Entering into adolescence, she endured the painful pull of nostalgia and struggled to express herself in a strange unyielding new language.   Her spiritual and intellectual odyssey continued in college and led her ultimately to New York’s literary world yet still she felt caught between two languages, two cultures. But her perspective also made her a keen observer of an America in the flux of change. A classically American chronicle of upward mobility and assimilation. Lost in Translation is also an incisive meditation on coming to terms with one’s own uniqueness, on learning how deeply culture affects the mind and body, and finally, on what it means to accomplish a translation of one’s self.