Guide to the Papers of Leon Feinberg (1897-1969) 1906-1969 (bulk 1920-1960) RG 601
Processed by Marek Web. Additional processing by Rachel S. Harrison as part of the Leon Levy Archival Processing Initiative, made possible by the Leon Levy Foundation.
YIVO Institute for Jewish Research15 West 16th Street
New York, NY 10011
Email: archives@yivo.cjh.org
URL: http://www.yivo.org
©2011 YIVO Institute for Jewish Research. All rights reserved.
Electronic finding aid was encoded in EAD 2002 by Rachel S. Harrison in December 2011. Description is in English.</h5>
Collection Overview
Title: Guide to the Papers of Leon Feinberg (1897-1969) 1906-1969 (bulk 1920-1960) RG 601
Predominant Dates:bulk 1920-1960
ID: RG 601 FA
Extent: 14.83 Linear Feet
Arrangement: The materials in this collection are arranged topically and by format. The correspondence, Yiddish subject files and some of the written materials are arranged alphabetically according to the Yiddish alphabet. The Russian subject files are arranged according to the Russian alphabet. Personal names of correspondents have been transliterated, journal titles and organization names have been transliterated and translated, and the titles of speeches and writings have been transliterated and translated. Yiddish names have been transliterated according to YIVO standards except when the individual is known in English by another spelling. Additionally, if the name appeared in Latin letters anywhere within the folder, that spelling was used rather than a standard transliteration. The collection is organized in ten series, some of which have been further subdivided into subseries. The original inventory was completed in October 1974 by Marek Web. Additional processing completed in December 2011.
Abstract
This collection contains the personal and professional papers of Yiddish journalist, poet, novelist, and translator Leon Feinberg. These materials include correspondence with Yiddish literary figures and with organizations, newspaper clippings about writers and about Leon Feinberg and his works, subject files, manuscripts of works by Feinberg and by other writers, and some of Feinberg’s personal documents. These materials relate to Feinberg’s long career with various Russian and Yiddish periodicals and literary organizations.
Scope and Contents of the Materials
The materials in this collection relate to Feinberg’s literary works in Russian and Yiddish, consisting mainly of correspondence with Yiddish literary figures and with organizations, as well as newspaper clippings and subject files. Correspondents include A. Almi, Ephraim Auerbach, Shlomo Bickel, Menahem Boraisha, Ossip Dymow, Jacob Glantz, Aaron Glanz-Leyeles, Jacob Glatstein, Abraham Golomb, Chaim Grade, Peretz Hirschbein, David Ignatoff, Rachel Korn, H. Leivick, Itzik Manger, Mani Leib, Moshe Nadir, Shmuel Niger, Joseph Opatoshu, Abbo Ostrowsky, Melech Ravitch, A.A. Roback, Isaac Bashevis Singer, Abraham Sutzkever, Malka Heifetz Tussman, and Zishe Weinper.
There is also family correspondence, materials relating to the Yiddish P.E.N. Club and the I.L. Peretz Yiddish Writers Union, including correspondence, newspaper clippings, circulars, correspondence about the World Conference of Yiddish Writers in 1964, and lists of Yiddish P.E.N. Club members. Clippings include articles about writers, about Leon Feinberg’s work and his subject files. Among the various topics collected by Feinberg for reference are materials about Yiddish language, Yiddish writers and literature, Jews in the Soviet Union, and Russian Jewish writers. Manuscripts of Feinberg’s works consist of poems, translations, plays, and fragments of novels. There are also manuscripts by other writers, copies of speeches and lectures, and personal documents. The materials in this collection date from 1906-1969, the bulk of which are from 1920-1960.
Historical Note
Yehudah Aryeh Leyb (Leon) Feinberg was born 6 February 1897 in Kodyma, Podolya Province, Russia (now Ukraine), the son of Rabbi Nathan Samuel Feinberg and Sheva Tomashpolsky Feinberg. He attended kheyder until he was 9 years old and then at age 10, the family moved to Odessa, where Feinberg entered the Iglitzky-Rapoport gymnasium and his father was the editor of the Odeser Folksblatt (Odessa People’s Journal). Feinberg’s father was later arrested and then forced to leave Odessa on account of an article in this publication, at which point he traveled to the United States to search for a job. Rabbi Feinberg later taught chemistry at Ohio State University and Hebrew educational practices and wrote several books.
Leon Feinberg had already started writing poetry in Russian by the age of 12 and he published his first volume of Russian poetry in 1914, having been strongly influenced by the Russian Symbolists. Feinberg completed his studies at the Iglitzky-Rapoport Gymnasium in Odessa in 1912 and then traveled to America for the first time, following his father. After returning to Russia with his father, Feinberg started attending Moscow University in 1915. He won first prize in the 1918 All-Russian Poetry Competition for his poem “The Soul of Russia.” He graduated from Moscow University in 1919 with a diploma in literature, languages and philosophy. He published his works in several Russian journals in Moscow, including Neva, Lietopis (Record), which was published by Maxim Gorky, and others, often under the pseudonym Leonid Grebniev. He also published several books of Russian poetry and was involved in the Imaginist Group of poet Sergei Yesenin.
Feinberg served three years as an officer in the Red Army during the Bolshevik Revolution, including spending some time as the adjutant for the important Soviet commissar Jan (Yakov) Gamarnik, who was H.N. Bialik’s brother-in-law. He was captured by the White forces of General Anton Ivanovich Denikin in the violent struggles in Southern Ukraine in autumn 1919 and only escaped to Turkey through the intervention of Bialik in 1920. Also in 1920, and also with Bialik’s help, Feinberg traveled to Palestine and was one of the founders of a new kibbutz, Kiryat Anavim, near Jerusalem. He traveled all over the world as a sailor, to Morocco, Tunis, Algiers, India, and various countries in Europe before immigrating to the United States in 1921.
He continued to write in Russian when he first arrived in the United States, publishing in Russian journals in New York and Chicago, including Novoye Russkoye Slovo (New Russian Word), where he worked as a literary editor. He later began writing in Yiddish and published his poems and other works, including translations into Yiddish of Russian and English literature and articles on public affairs, in many important Yiddish journals in the United States, Poland, Argentina, Israel, and several other countries. His first Yiddish poem was published in the Freie Arbeiter Stimme (Free Voice of Labor) in 1921. He continued to use the name Leonid Grebniev or just L. Grebniev, Leonid Amarant, Alter Eno, L. Gorin, L. Senders, F. Gorny, and other pseudonyms.
From 1926-1929 Feinberg worked as a co-editor and member of the writing staff at the Freiheit (Freedom). He quit over what he felt was the Freiheit’s anti-Jewish response to the Arab pogrom in Hebron, Palestine in 1929. He returned to the newspaper in 1932 but then quit again when he canceled his membership in the Communist Party in 1939 in connection with the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact. He wrote for the monthly Der Hamer (The Hammer), Di Feder (The Pen), Freie Arbeiter Stimme, Yiddishe Tageblatt (Yiddish Daily News), Morgn Zhurnal (Morning Journal), Amerikaner (The American), Freiheit, Morgn-Yidishe Kultur (Morning Yiddish Culture), Di Naye Prese (The New Press), Jewish Daily Forward, Zukunft (Future), Der Groyser Kundes (The Big Stick), Der Vokh (The Week), Undzer Veg (The Way), Yidisher Kultur (Jewish Culture), Vayter (Further), Yidisher Kemfer (Jewish Fighter), Literarishe Bleter (Literary Pages) in Warsaw, Di Prese (The Press) in Buenos Aires, Di Goldene Keyt (The Golden Chain) in Tel Aviv, and Epokhe (Epoch), which he and I.A. Weissman published and edited from 1943-1947. He was an editor for the leftist journals Funken (Sparks) and Signal from 1933-1934. He became a feature writer, and later city editor, for Der Tog (The Day) starting in 1941, where he spent many years editing the news columns and writing numerous articles speaking out against Communism. He was the president of the Yiddish P.E.N. Club in New York and the vice president of the I.L. Peretz Writers Union. He also worked for the Yiddish Arts Theater, 1923-1926 and the Artef Theater, 1932-1934.
Feinberg wrote 15 books of prose and poetry in Yiddish and four books in Russian as well as numerous unpublished writings. He published an anthology in Russian of the Yiddish poets in America, in which there are over 300 poems from more than 100 poets. He won the Leib Hoffer prize in Buenos Aires for his book Der Farmishpeter Dor (The Doomed Generation) and in 1966 he received the Liza and Willie Schorr Literary Stipend from the Jewish Culture Congress. English translations of his work are to be found in Joseph Leftwich's The Golden Peacock (1940), and J. B. Cooperman's America in Yiddish Poetry (1967).
Leon was married to Florence Weingarten on October 18, 1932. They had 5 children: Gerald, Babette, Rita, Harriet, and Norman. Leon Feinberg passed away January 22, 1969 in New York.
Subject/Index Terms
Authors, Yiddish, Clippings - Newspaper clippings, Documents - Correspondence, Documents - Manuscripts, Glanz-Leyeles, Aaron, 1889-1966, Glatstein, Jacob, 1896-1971, Grade, Chaim, 1910-1982, Korn, Rachel, 1898-, Leivick, H., 1888-1962, Manger, Itzik, 1901-1969, Mann, Mendel, 1916-1975, Meitus, Eliahu, 1892-1977, Morgn-frayhayt, Newspaper publishing, New York (N.Y.), Panitz, Joseph, Photographs, Ravitch, Melech, 1893-1976, Roback, A. A. (Abraham Aaron), 1890-1965, Rosenblatt, Herschel, Russia, Sutzkever, Abraham, 1913-2010, Tog (New York, N.Y.: 1922), Weinper, Zishe, 1892-1957, Yiddish newspapers, Yiddish P.E.N. Center (New York, N.Y.), Yiddish periodicals, Yiddish Writers’ Union, YIVO Archives
Administrative Information
Access Restrictions: Permission to use the collection must be obtained from the YIVO Archivist.
Use Restrictions:
Permission to publish part or parts of the collection must be obtained from the YIVO Archives. For more information, contact:
YIVO Institute for Jewish Research, Center for Jewish History, 15 West 16th Street, New York, NY 10011
email: archives@yivo.cjh.org
Acquisition Method: The collection was given to the YIVO Archives by Leon Feinberg’s family in 1970.
Separated Materials: There is no information about materials that are associated by provenance to the described materials that have been physically separated or removed.
Related Materials: Feinberg’s correspondence is represented in several other collections within the YIVO Archives. In addition, the YIVO Archives has the Records of Freie Arbeiter Stimme RG 763, Records of Yiddish P.E.N. Club RG 1236 and other materials about the Yiddish P.E.N. Club, Records of the I.L. Peretz Yiddish Writers Union RG 701, Records of the Day-Morning Journal (Tog-Morgn Zhurnal) RG 639, and several of Feinberg’s original works and translations.
Preferred Citation: Published citations should take the following form: Identification of item, date (if known); Papers of Leon Feinberg; RG 601; folder number; YIVO Institute for Jewish Research.
Box and Folder Listing
Browse by Series:
Series 1: Series I: Correspondence, 1924-1969,
Series 2: Series II: Yiddish P.E.N. Club and I.L. Peretz Writers Union, 1947-1968,
Series 3: Series III: Newspaper Clippings, 1920-1968,
Series 4: Series IV: Manuscripts of Various Literary Works, 1916-1968,
Series 5: Series V: Manuscripts by Others, 1943-1957,
Series 6: Series VI: Rabbi Nathan Samuel Feinberg Clippings and Manuscripts, 1913-1938, undated,
Series 7: Series VII: Speeches and Lectures, 1937-1968,
Series 8: Series VIII: Materials Gathered by Feinberg (Subject Files), 1917-1968,
Series 9: Series IX: Miscellaneous, 1906-1968, undated,
Series 10: Series X: Supplement, 1948-1964,
All
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Series VIII: Materials Gathered by Feinberg (Subject Files)1917-1968
- The materials in this series are divided into two subseries, Yiddish Materials and Russian Materials, although there are some Russian and English materials in the Yiddish subseries as well as Yiddish and English materials in the Russian subseries. The files are mainly made up of newspaper clippings, many of which are undated. Each subseries is arranged according to its respective alphabet.
- Folders: 172
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Subseries 1: Yiddish Materials1922-1962
- Folders: 86
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Folder 510: Yidish Iber der Velt (Yiddish Over the World)1953-1958
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Folder 511: Yidish in Amerike (Yiddish in America)1943-1957
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Folder 512: Yidish in Yisroel (Yiddish in Israel)1950-1960
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Folder 513: Yidish in Soviet-Rusland (Yiddish in Russia)1943-1961
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Folder 514: Yidishe Geshikhte (Jewish History)1936-1961
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Folder 515: Yidish Lider (Yiddish Songs)1946-1961
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Folder 516: Yidishe Literatur-Farsheydns (Yiddish Literature-Miscellaneous)1948-1959
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Folder 517: Yidishe Literatur in Amerike - Yisroel (Yiddish Literature in America - Israel)1955-1961
- Folder 518: Yidishe Muzik in Amerike (Yiddish Music in America) (missing)
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Folder 519: Yidisher Komunizm in Amerike (Jewish Communism in America)1957
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Folder 520: Yidishe Shrayber in der Velt-Literatur (Yiddish Writers in World Literature)1955-1961
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Folder 521: Yidishe Shrayber in Amerike (Yiddish Writers in America)1952-1960
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Folder 522: Yidishe Shrayber in Soviet-Rusland (Yiddish Writers in Russia)1941-1957
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Folder 523: Yidn in Sovietnfarband (Jews in the Soviet Union)1952-1957
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Folder 524: Yidn in Rusland (Jews in Russia)1944-1958
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Folder 525: Ahad HaAm1951-1956
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Folder 526: Olgin, Moshe1932-1962
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Folder 527: Astour, Michael Czernichow1958-1960
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Folder 528: Opatoshu, Joseph1954
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Folder 529: Aronson, Grigori1957
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Folder 530: Asch, Sholem1939-1957
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Folder 531: Osherowitch, Mendel1962
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Folder 532: Buchwald, Nathan1956
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Folder 533: Bomze, Nahum1955
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Folder 534: Boraisha, Menahem1954-1955
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Folder 535: Baal Makhshoves (Isidore Israel Eliashev)1949-1960
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Folder 536: Baal Shem Tov, Israel1961
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Folder 537: Bergelson, David1946-1956
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Folder 538: Brandes, George1954
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Folder 539: Bratslaver, Nakhman1950
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Folder 540: Bialik, Hayim Nakhman1934-1964
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Folder 541: Goldberg, Ben-Zion1941-1950
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Folder 542: Gapon, Georgii1954
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Folder 543: Garfinkel, Genia1942
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Folder 544: Glatstein, Jacob1953-1957
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Folder 545: Grade, Chaim1950-1959
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Folder 546: Greenberg, Chaim1953
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Folder 547: Halpern, Moyshe Leib1956
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Folder 548: Halkin, Shmuel1961
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Folder 549: Heine, Heinrich1956-1957
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Folder 550: Halevi, Yehuda1950-1951
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Folder 551: Hebraishe Literatur un Yidish (Hebrew Literature and Yiddish)1955-1956
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Folder 552: Hess, Moses1950-1962
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Folder 553: Waiter, A.1948-1949
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Folder 554: Winchevsky, Morris1956
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Folder 555: Vlasovtzes (Vlasovites, Russian soldiers under Andrey Vlasov who fought on the side of the Germans during WWII)1951
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Folder 556: Vergelis, Aaron1961
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Folder 557: Zohar and Kabbalah1941-1956
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Folder 558: Zhitlowsky, Chaimundated
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Folder 559: Lutzky, Aaron1957
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Folder 560: Leivick, H.1956-1959
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Folder 561: Liessin, Abraham1954-1955
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Folder 562: Leyeles, Aaron (Glanz)1956-1959
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Folder 563: Mann, Mendel1951-1960
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Folder 564: Manger, Itzik1958-1961
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Folder 565: Mani Leib1953-1956
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Folder 566: Markish, Peretz1956-1957
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Folder 567: Mendele Mokher Sefarim1956-1958
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Folder 568: Moses (Bible)1944-1952
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Folder 569: Nadir, Moshe1922-1958
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Folder 570: Nomberg, Hersh David1952
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Folder 571: Naidus, Leib1949
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Folder 572: Sutzkever, Abraham1956-1958
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Folder 573: Segalowitch, Zusman1949
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Folder 574: Piade, Moshe1950
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Folder 575: Pinski, David1952-1959
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Folder 576: Plekhanov, Georgii1954
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Folder 577: Peretz, I.L.1945-1955
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Folder 578: Feinberg, Nathan Samuel1939-1940
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Folder 579: Fefer, Itzik1956
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Folder 580: Frug, Semen Grigorievich1956
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Folder 581: Freiheit (Freedom) and Morgn Freiheit (Morning Freedom)1952
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Folder 582: Cahan, Abraham1951-1960
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Folder 583: Kovner, Ari Tzvi1948-1961
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Folder 584: Katzenelson, Itzhak1949
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Folder 585: Korn, Rokhl1950
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Folder 586: Kulbak, Moshe1954
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Folder 587: Rabinovitch, Shimon1955-1957
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Folder 588: Ravitch, Melech1953-1954
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Folder 589: Rosenfeld, Morris1960-1962
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Folder 590: Rosenblatt, Herschel1956
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Folder 591: Reisin, Abraham1952-1953
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Folder 592: Ressler, Benjamin1952
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Folder 593: Shapiro, Lamed1953
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Folder 594: Shatzky, Jacob1956
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Folder 595: Schwartz, Israel Jacob1961
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Subseries 2: Russian Materials1917-1968
- Folders: 86
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Folder 596: Agnivtsev, Nikolai Iakovlevich
Andreyev, Leonid N.
Annensky, Innokentiy Fyodorovich
1944-1951 -
Folder 597: Azef, Yevno Fishelevich1961-1962
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Folder 598: Aldanov, Mark Aleksandrovich1954-1961
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Folder 599: Antokolski, Mark Matveevich and Pavel1944-1952
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Folder 600: Akhmatova, Anna Andreevna and son, Nikolai Gumilev1951-1962
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Folder 601: Babel, Isaac1955-1962
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Folder 602: Bagritskii, Eduard1944-1952
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Folder 603: Balmont, Konstantin Dmitrievich1943-1957
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Folder 604: Baratinsky, Evgeny Abramovich1944-1950
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Folder 605: Bely, Andrey1953-1962
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Folder 606: Beriia, Lavrentii Pavlovich1953-1954
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Folder 607: Blok, Aleksandr Aleksandrovich1943-1962
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Folder 608: Bryusov, Valery Yakovlevich1944-1961
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Folder 609: Bunin, Ivan Alekseevich1942-1962
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Folder 610: Bukharin, Nikolai Ivanovich1952
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Folder 611: Vereshchagin, Vasily Vasilyevich1944-1954
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Folder 612: Vertinskii, Aleksandr1957
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Folder 613: Gamarnik, Ian Borisovich Garshin, Vsevolod MikhailovichGershenson, Mikhail OsipovichGippius, Zinaida NikolaevnaGladkov, Fyodor VasilyevichGrigoryev, Apollon Aleksandrovich Goncharov, Ivan AlexandrovichGrossman, Vasily Semyonovich1943-1956, , 1943-1953
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Folder 614: Gorky, Maxim1936-1968
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Folder 615: Grozny, Ivan (Ivan the Terrible)1943-1952
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Folder 616: Gumilev, Nikolai1944-1952
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Folder 617: Danilevsky, Nikolai Yakovlevich1957
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Folder 618: Dymow, Ossip1948-1958
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Folder 619: Djilas, Milovan1957-1967
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Folder 620: Yenukidze, Abel Safronovichundated
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Folder 621: Yesenin, Sergei Aleksandrovich and Isadora Duncan1949-1961
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Folder 622: Yevtushenko, Evgeny Aleksandrovich1962
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Folder 623: Jabotinsky, Vladimir1950-1958
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Folder 624: Zhdanov, Andrei Aleksandrovich1948
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Folder 625: Ilf, Ilya and Evgenii Petrov1942-1962
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Folder 626: Kaganovich, Lazar Moiseevich1957-1961
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Folder 627: Kazakevich, Emanuel Genrikhovich
Kantemir, Prince Antiokh Dmitrievich
Klyuev, Nikolai Alekseevich
Kataev, Valentin Petrovich
Korneychuk, Aleksandr Yevdokimovich
Kuzmin, Mikhail Alekseevich
Koltsov, Aleksey Vasilievich
1944-1962 -
Folder 628: Kirov, Sergei Mironovich1959
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Folder 629: Kollontai, Aleksandra1952-1961
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Folder 630: Korolenko, Vladimir Galaktionovich1944-1961
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Folder 631: Levitan, Isaak Ilich1950-1961
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Folder 632: Lenin, Vladimir Ilich1917, 1947-1962
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Folder 633: Litvinov, Maksim Maksimovich1950-1955
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Folder 634: Mandelshtam, Osip1946-1961
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Folder 635: Mikoian, Anastas Ivanovich1957
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Folder 636: Malenkov, Georgii Maksimilianovich1952-1957
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Folder 637: Marmy, Andre1953
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Folder 638: Marshak, Samuil Yakovlevich
Merezhkovsky, Dmitry Sergeyevich
Minsky, Nikolai Maksimovich
Mikhalkov, Sergey Vladimirovich
1946-1960 -
Folder 639: Makhno, Nestor Ivanovich1947
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Folder 640: Mayakovsky, Vladimir1943-1962
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Folder 641: Meyerhold, Vsevolod Emilevich1947-1955
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Folder 642: Nadson, Semen Iakovlevich1962
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Folder 643: Nekrasov, Nikolai Alekseevich1946-1952
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Folder 644: Nemirovich-Danchenko, Vladimir Ivanovich1943
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Folder 645: Romanov, Nikolay Alexandrovich (Tsar Nicholas II)1954
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Folder 646: Odes (Odessa)1943-1961
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Folder 647: Olesha, Iurii Karlovich1954-1961
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Folder 648: Ordzhonikidze, Sergo1952
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Folder 649: Pasternak, Boris1944-1962
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Folder 650: Paustovsky, Konstantin1961
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Folder 651: Pilnyak, Boris
Prutkov, Kozma Petrovich
Pilsky, Piotr
1946-1961 - Folder 652: folder not used
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Folder 653: Pudovkin, Vsevolod Illarionovich1953
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Folder 654: Remizov, Aleksei1951-1957
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Folder 655: R.A.P.P. (Rossiiskaya assotsiatsiya proletarskikh pisatelyei, Russian Association of Proletarian Writers)1949
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Folder 656: Rozanov, Vasily Vasilievich1953-1956
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Folder 657: Rusland (Russia)1943-1962
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Folder 658: Rusishe shprakh (Russian language)1951-1957
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Folder 659: Sovet-Rusland (Soviet Russia)1942-1965
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Folder 660: Sovetishe perzenlekhkaytn (Soviet personalities)1955-1958
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Folder 661: Sovetishe yugnt (Soviet youth)1958-1963
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Folder 662: Sovetishe kompartey (Soviet Communist Party)1956-1961
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Folder 663: Sovetishe armey (Soviet army)1956-1957
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Folder 664: Sovetishe literatur (Soviet literature)1947-1962
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Folder 665: Serapionen (Serapion Brothers writers group)1944-1949
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Folder 666: Simonov, Konstantin Mikhailovich1943-1957
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Folder 667: Solovyov, Vladimir Sergeyevich1953-1957
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Folder 668: Stalin, Joseph Vissarionovich1948-1961
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Folder 669: Stolypin, Petr Arkadevich1952-1961
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Folder 670: Trotsky, Leon1940-1962
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Folder 671: Tukhachevskii, Mikhail Nikolaevich1953-1962
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Folder 672: Utkin, Iosif1945
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Folder 673: Battle of Tsaritsyn (later known as Stalingrad)1943-1944
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Folder 674: Eisenstein, Sergei Mikhailovich1953
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Folder 675: Ehrenburg, Ilya1944-1962
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Folder 676: Erdman, Nikolay Robertovich
Solovyov, Vladimir Sergeyevich
Yudin, Gennadii Vasilevich
Yakubovich, Pyotr Filippovich (L. Melshin)
Kobylinsky, Lev (Eliis)
1956-1960 -
Folder 677: Yudenich, Nikolai Nikolaevich1952
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Folder 678: Yakir, Iona Emmanuilovich1961-1962
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Folder 679: Sholokhov, Mikhail Aleksandrovich1944-1962
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Folder 680: Shestov, Lev Isaakovich1944-1957
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Folder 681: Shevchenko, Taras Hryhorovych1944-1964
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Browse by Series:
Series 1: Series I: Correspondence, 1924-1969,
Series 2: Series II: Yiddish P.E.N. Club and I.L. Peretz Writers Union, 1947-1968,
Series 3: Series III: Newspaper Clippings, 1920-1968,
Series 4: Series IV: Manuscripts of Various Literary Works, 1916-1968,
Series 5: Series V: Manuscripts by Others, 1943-1957,
Series 6: Series VI: Rabbi Nathan Samuel Feinberg Clippings and Manuscripts, 1913-1938, undated,
Series 7: Series VII: Speeches and Lectures, 1937-1968,
Series 8: Series VIII: Materials Gathered by Feinberg (Subject Files), 1917-1968,
Series 9: Series IX: Miscellaneous, 1906-1968, undated,
Series 10: Series X: Supplement, 1948-1964,
All