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・ Break In
・ Break in
・ Break in the Circle
・ Break In The Seal
・ Bread and Wine
・ Bread and Wine (novel)
・ Bread bag
・ Bread Bakers Guild of America
・ Bread bowl
・ Bread bun (hieroglyph)
・ Bread clip
・ Bread crumbs
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・ Bread for the City
・ Bread for the World
Bread Givers
・ Bread Head
・ Bread in Europe
・ Bread knife
・ Bread Loaf
・ Bread Loaf Mountain
・ Bread Loaf Mountain (disambiguation)
・ Bread Loaf School of English
・ Bread Loaf Writers' Conference
・ Bread Loaf, Vermont
・ Bread loafing
・ Bread machine
・ Bread N' Butter
・ Bread of Life Church
・ Bread of Life Discourse


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Bread Givers : ウィキペディア英語版
Bread Givers

''Bread Givers'' is a 1925 novel by United States author Anzia Yezierska; it tells the story of a girl growing up in an immigrant Jewish household in New York City. Her parents are from Poland in the Russian Empire.
==Synopsis==
''Bread Givers'', a Jewish-American female coming-of-age story written by Anzia Yezierska, begins with 10-year-old Sara Smolinsky. She lives with her father, Reb, her mother, Shenah, and her three older sisters, Bessie, Fania, and Mashah, in the Lower East Side of New York city in a tenement. The Smolinskys are destitute, with the five women struggling for money to simply survive, and Reb devoted as an Orthodox male to the study of the Torah, Jewish sacred texts. The opening chapter hints at the struggle between Sara, who yearns for American independence, and her father, who clings to traditional Jewish culture.
The following three chapters portray Reb's domination of his daughters. Sara's three sisters fall in love, but their father rejects their choices, used to families having arranged marriages with the parents' deciding. Reb sees to his financial goals with the marriages, but the daughters have very unhappy lives. Bessie marries Zalmon the fish-peddler. Mashah is wedded to Moe Mirsky, a man pretending to be a successful diamond dealer, but he is just a middle man. He spends his money on showy clothes and lets his family go hungry. Fania marries Abe Schmukler, a rich man who had attracted her affection when flush, but gambles and shows her off for his own benefit. Seeing all this, Sara decides her father will not make her marriage decision.
The next chapters recount financial misfortune as Reb is hoodwinked at business. The tension between Reb and Sara escalates quickly when she moves with the family to Elizabeth, New Jersey. She works in his store, but must confront his lack of business sense. Despite his failures, Reb does not take any advice from his wife and Sara. Eventually, Sara moves back to New York City and decides to become a teacher.
While living with her parents, Sara had been within the first generation Jewish-American culture of new immigrants. At college, she encounters mostly students from the majority American Christian culture, which has been urbanized for generations. In order to pay for school and get good grades, Sara must ignore her family, to work and study. She wants to fit in and learns to talk, dress and act like her American peers. She leaves college with her teaching degree and $1,000, which she won in an essay contest.
Feeling successful, Sara returns home to find her mother fatally ill. After her mother's death, her father remarries but learns that his new wife, widow Mrs. Feinstein, is after his late wife's lodge money. Sara and her sisters, still furious over their father's treatment of them, become enraged at his quick marriage. They refuse to help him when his new wife spends all his money and declines to work. Sara goes back to Manhattan and starts teaching.
Mrs. Feinstein is not satisfied with Reb's money and wants more from his daughters. She is angry that Sara is avoiding her father, so she writes a nasty letter to the principal of the school where Sara is teaching, Hugo Seelig, to try to discredit her. The principal sympathizes with Sara and tells her so. Gradually the two start to date; he is also a Jewish Polish American. They marry.
Sara feels she has left her old life completely behind and wants to find a way to give back to the community. She finds her father practically on his deathbed, lying in the gutter and selling chewing gum. Sara asks her father to come live with her and Hugo. Reb is concerned about whether he can live with Sara. He says he will come if they "promise to keep sacred all that is sacred to ()." In the end, Sara is still haunted by her father and his culture.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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