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         Lazarus Emma:     more detail
  1. Admetus and other poems by Emma Lazarus. by Lazarus. Emma. 1849-1887., 1871-01-01
  2. Songs of a Semite The dance to death and other poems by Emma Laz by Lazarus. Emma. 1849-1887., 1882-01-01
  3. Songs of a Semite: The dance to death, and other poems by Emma, 1849-1887 Lazarus, 2009-10-26
  4. The Spagnoletto [a play in 5 acts] Unpublished manuscript by Emma, 1849-1887 Lazarus, 2009-10-26
  5. The poems of Emma Lazarus by Emma Lazarus 1849-1887 Lazarus Josephine 1846-1910, 1889-12-31
  6. Emma Lazarus (July 22, 1849-November 19, 1887): Selections from her poetry and prose by Emma Lazarus, 1982
  7. Emma Lazarus Rediscovered by Eve Merriam, 1999-03-01
  8. I Lift My Lamp: Emma Lazarus and the Statue of Liberty (Jewish Biography Series) by Nancy Smiler Levinson, 1986-06-30
  9. Emma Lazarus in Her World: Life and Letters by Bette Roth Young, 1995-05
  10. Emma Lazarus (American Women of Achievement) by Diane Lefer, 1988-03
  11. Emma Lazarus, Poet, Jewish Activist, Pioneer Zionist (Publications of the Jewish Historical Society of New York ; No. 3) by Charles Angoff, 1979-06

61. American Jewish History, Volume 84 - Table Of Contents
Emma Lazarus and Her Jewish Problem Subjects. Lazarus, Emma, 18491887 Religion.Lazarus, Emma, 1849-1887 Criticism and interpretation.
http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/american_jewish_history/toc/ajh84.4.html
American Jewish History 84.4, December 1996
Special Issue: Defining Jewish Identity in American, Part One
Guest Editor: Edward S. Shapiro
Contributors
Contents
Introduction

62. Freedman Catalogue Lookup: Artist Lazarus, Emma (1849-1887)
Look up artist Lazarus, Emma (18491887). Name Lazarus, Emma (1849-1887).Tracks with this artist. Title Colossus On album A-015(a) (The American Jewish
http://digital.library.upenn.edu/webbin/freedman/lookupartist?hr=&what=5304

63. Emma Lazarus
Lazarus, Emma (18491887), US poet, best remembered for her sonnet engraved onthe Statue of Liberty. Born into a New York Sephardi family,
http://www.lastar.org/lazarus.html
LAZARUS, EMMA (1849-1887), U.S. poet, best remembered for her sonnet engraved on the Statue of Liberty

64. Penn State Harrisburg Library Individual Personal Name Files In
Lazarus, Emma, 18491887 LEBLANC, Georgette, 1869-1941 LEE, Eliza Buckminster,1794-1864 LEE, Vernon, 1856-1935 LESLIE, Eliza, 1787-1858 LEVI, Maud
http://www.hbg.psu.edu/library/womenslist.html

65. Hebrew Garden
Emma Lazarus (18491887) Jewish American Writer/ Poet. Emma Lazarus was bornJuly 22, 1849 in New York City. She is most famous for, “Give me your tired,
http://academic.csuohio.edu/clevelandhistory/culturalgardens/Gardens/Hebrew/laza
Photographs Hebrew Garden Main Page
Emma Lazarus: Jewish American Writer/ Poet Emma Lazarus was born July 22, 1849 in New York City.  She is most famous for, “Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses...” written in 1883 and engraved on a memorial plaque that was affixed to the pedestal of the Statue of Liberty in 1903.  The poetry is part of a sonnet called "The New Colossus," that expresses Lazarus’ belief in the United States as the haven of Europe's masses yearning to breathe the fresh air of democracy. ( Fau.edu.library In 1881-82 Emma Lazarus began to translate the works of Jewish poets. She wrote essays and commentaries attacking and responding to the anti-Semites of the day. She became especially interested in the plight of the Russian-Jews as she encountered them on Wards Island, where they landed from overseas, and where she did volunteer work. In her writings, Lazarus set forth her ideas and plans for the rebirth of Jewish life by a national and cultural revival in the United States and in the Holy Land. ( Fau.edu.library

66. New Colossus E-book By Emma Lazarus
Lazarus, Emma (18491887) - American poet, essayist and philanthropist, her workblossomed as she championed the Jewish people during their persecution in
http://www.19.5degs.com/ebook/new-colossus/1069
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New Colossus E-book
Author: Emma Lazarus
Genre: Literature Poetry
Lazarus, Emma (1849-1887) - American poet, essayist and philanthropist, her work blossomed as she championed the Jewish people during their persecution in Russia. She believed America promised hope to all oppressed people. New Colossus (1883) - In 1903 this poem was engraved on the pedestal of the Statue of Liberty in "loving memory" of the author. Opening lines: Not like the brazen giant of Greek fame, / With conquering limbs astride from land to land; ...
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67. Poet's Choice
When Emma Lazarus (18491887) was asked to compose a poem for a proposed immensestatue representing Liberty Enlightening the World, by the French
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/05/19/AR2005051901369.
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Poet's Choice
By Robert Pinsky Sunday, May 22, 2005; Page BW12 When Emma Lazarus (1849-1887) was asked to compose a poem for a proposed immense statue representing "Liberty Enlightening the World," by the French sculptor Frederic Auguste Bartholdi, she at first rejected the commission, apparently reluctant to compose on assignment. So writes John Hollander in his introduction to the new Library of America volume Emma Lazarus: Selected Poems . She may also have felt the limitations of writing a poem to be used as a means of attracting donors to the project. As Hollander points out, it is extremely good. If you read attentively beyond the familiar phrases, and beyond the literary conventions of Lazarus's historical moment, the freshness of imagination in "The New Colossus" is striking: The New Colossus
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Not like the brazen giant of Greek fame

68. A Century Of Immigration, 1820-1924 (From Haven To Home: 350 Years Of Jewish Lif
Irving Berlin (18881989) and Emma Lazarus (1849-1887) Give Me Your Tired, YourPoor, from Miss Liberty, 1949. Piano vocal score.
http://www.loc.gov/exhibits/haventohome/haven-century.html
The Library of Congress Exhibitions Find in Haven to Home Exhibit Pages Exhibition Web Pages All Library of Congress Pages HOME Exhibition Overview Checklist of Objects Acknowledgments ... Read More About It
Exhibition Sections: Haven A Century of Immigration: 1820-1924 Confronting Challenges Home ... Conclusion
A Century of Immigration, 1820-1924
Albert Potter (1903-1937)
Eastside New York

between 1931 and 1935
Woodcut print
Ben and Beatrice Goldstein
Foundation Collection
Prints and Photographs Division
I n the century spanning the years 1820 through 1924, an increasingly steady flow of Jews made their way to America, culminating in a massive surge of immigrants towards the beginning of the twentieth century. Impelled by economic hardship, persecution, and the great social and political upheavals of the nineteenth century industrialization, overpopulation, and urbanization

69. Library Of Congress Information Bulletin - September 2004
Emma Lazarus, author of “The New Colossus,” which is inscribed on the the manuscript poem “The New Colossus,” in the hand of Emma Lazarus (18491887),
http://www.loc.gov/loc/lcib/0409/haven.html
September 2004
From Haven to Home 350 Years of Jewish Life in America Photo by Charles Chambers
In 1654, after Portugal recaptured Brazil and expelled its Jewish settlers, a group of 23 Jewish refugees arrived in New Amsterdam (now New York City) seeking a safe haven and ultimately made a home for themselves and their descendants in the New World. The Home section focuses on the opportunities and challenges inherent in a free society and the uniquely American Jewish religious movements, institutions and associations created in response. In telling the story of diverse groups of Jewish immigrants who made the United States their home, the exhibition examines the intertwined themes, and sometimes conflicting aims, of accommodation, assertion, adaptation and acculturation that have characterized the American Jewish experience from its beginnings in 1654 to today. Haven
In 1654 Brazil passed from Dutch to Portuguese rule, and Jewish settlers were expelled. Most returned to Holland or moved to Protestant-ruled colonies in the Caribbean. A group of 23 Jewish refugees, including women and children, arrived in New Amsterdam hoping to build a new home for themselves. In the years that followed, the growing Jewish community pressed the authorities to extend to them rights offered to other settlers, including the right to trade and travel, to stand guard, to own property, to establish a cemetery, to erect a house of worship and to participate fully in the political process.

70. World Book || Poets L-Q
Emma Lazarus (18491887) was an American poet. She is best known for her sonnet, TheNew Colossus (1883), which was inscribed on a plaque inside the
http://www2.worldbook.com/features/wwriters/html/poetsl-q.htm
Emma Lazarus Amy Lowell Phyllis McGinley Edna St. Vincent Millay ... Sylvia Plath
Emma Lazarus (1849-1887) was an American poet. She is best known for her sonnet, "The New Colossus" (1883), which was inscribed on a plaque inside the Statue of Liberty.
Lazarus was born in New York City. She wrote sentimental poetry about love and death and also translated works by the French author Victor Hugo and the German authors Heinrich Heine and Johann von Goethe. In 1881, violent anti-Jewish attacks took place in Russia, resulting in a wave of Jewish immigration to the United States. The attacks inspired Lazarus, a Jew, to write poetry that emotionally protested against the persecution of the Jews in Russia. The poems were collected in Songs of a Semite Amy Lowell (1874-1925) was an American poet, critic, and biographer. Like a number of other poets of her day, Lowell was strongly influenced by the American poet Ezra Pound. She was particularly influenced by Pound's belief that many poetic conventions of the past were worn out and restricted the poet's creativity. With Pound and other poets, Lowell became a leader of a movement called imagism. The imagists emphasized the clear, objective, and precise treatment of images, objects, and events. They wrote in a style known as free verse.
Lowell experimented with her own version of free verse, beginning with her second volume of poems

71. Legacy: A Journal Of American Women Writers: Emma Lazarus, Jewish American Poeti
Emma Lazarus (18491887) was a poet who struggled to translate the Jewish experienceinto the American idiom for the sake of masses of immigrants seeking to
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_hb193/is_200306/ai_n5798783
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Save a personal copy of any page on the Web and quickly find it again with Furl.net. It's free. Get started now. Emma Lazarus, Jewish American poetics, and the challenge of modernity.(Critical Essay) Legacy: A Journal of American Women Writers June, 2003 by Omer-Sherman, Ranen Content provided
in partnership with Read the full article with a Free Trial of HighBeam Research Emma Lazarus (1849-1887) was a poet who struggled to translate the Jewish experience into the American idiom for the sake of masses of immigrants seeking to negotiate their passage at the border crossing of American culture. Reading her today can teach us a great deal about the degree of imagination required in the journey from the humiliation of dispersion to the joys of Jewish and American nationalisms. I see Lazarus as the harbinger of the modern American ethnic Jew (and perhaps in some ways American ethnic writing as a corpus), one possessed simultaneously of an insider and an ...

72. In The Shadow Of Liberty
Emma Lazarus (18491887) is best remembered for her poem TheNew Colossus, composed in tribute to the Statue of Liberty.......Event
http://www.nypl.org/press/lazaruspanel.cfm
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What: "In the Shadow of Liberty" Event Description: Emma Lazarus (1849-1887) is best remembered for her poem 'The New Colossus," composed in tribute to the Statue of Liberty. The poem, whose famous lines include " Give me your tired, your poor / Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free ," is memorialized at the Statue's base. But as John Hollander and Esther Schor will reveal in a unique panel discussion at The New York Public Library, Lazarus's life was marked by a multitude of literary accomplishments often eclipsed by this one poem. The first self-consciously Jewish American writer, she translated French and Spanish poetry as a teen, forged friendships with literary giants like Emerson and Browning, and became a fierce defender of Judaism and of the rights of immigrants. The lecture will help restore Lazarus' place in the pantheon of great nineteenth century poets.

73. Florida Holocaust Museum - Antisemitism - Arts - Literature
PhotoEmma Lazarus, Engraving by T. Johnson from The New York Historical Society.Emma Lazarus, 18491887. One of the first successful Jewish American
http://www.flholocaustmuseum.org/history_wing/antisemitism/arts/literature.cfm
Arts Drama
Literature

Music
... Site Map
Literature
Canterbury Tales: The Prioress' Tale: The Canterbury Tales was written in the late 14th century as a set of stories told by a group of people while on a pilgrimage from London to Canterbury. In this work, Chaucer introduces the reader to several different types and classes of people who have set out for a similar purpose. Antisemitism abounds in the Prioress' Tale.
Emma Lazarus
One of the first successful Jewish American authors, Emma Lazarus was part of the late nineteenth century New York literary elite and was celebrated in her day as an important American poet. In her later years, she wrote bold, powerful poetry and essays protesting the rise of antisemitism and arguing for Russian immigrants' rights. She called on Jews to unite and create a homeland in Palestine before the title Zionist had even been coined. Top Photo: Emma Lazarus, Engraving by T. Johnson from The New York Historical Society

74. JWA - Posters - Emma Lazarus Poster
Emma Lazarus 18491887. Each poster includes timelines, images, and noteworthy For more information about Emma Lazarus, explore our online exhibit.
http://www.jwa.org/discover/inthepast/posters/viewposters/elposter.html
Visit Our Exhibits Choose an Exhibit Exhibits Main Page Women of Valor Women Who Dared Baltimore Stories Seattle Stories "Women elbowed, trod on each others toes, and did everything else they could without violating the proprieties" to find a place in the overcrowded hall to hear women speak at the first ever Jewish Women's Congress.
printSubnavItem('index', '/discover/inthepast/posters/index.html', 'About the Posters'); printSubnavItem('orderposters', '/discover/inthepast/posters/orderposters.html', 'Order Posters'); printSubnavItem('viewposters', '/discover/inthepast/posters/viewposters/entireseries.html', 'View Posters'); Posters: Women of Valor
printSubnavItem("entireseries", "Entire Series"); printSubnavItem("baposter", "Bella Abzug"); printSubnavItem("maposter", "Beatrice Alexander"); printSubnavItem("geposter", "Gertrude Elion"); printSubnavItem("rfposter", "Ray Frank"); printSubnavItem("egposter", "Emma Goldman");
printSubnavItem("rgposter", "Rebecca Gratz"); printSubnavItem("gposter", "Glikl Bas Judah"); printSubnavItem("elposter", "Emma Lazarus");

75. JWA - Posters - Emma Lazarus Poster - Printer Friendly Version
Emma Lazarus 18491887. Each poster includes timelines, images, and noteworthyquotes. For more information about Emma Lazarus, explore our online exhibit
http://www.jwa.org/cgi-bin/print-page.cgi?uri=/discover/inthepast/posters/viewpo

76. AMERICAN LITERATURE: 19th Century "L" (e-Book, E-Books, EBooks, EBook)
Lazarus, Emma, Selected Poetry of Emma Lazarus (18491887), 2003, Html, n/c,UToronto. Lazarus, Emma, The Poems of Emma Lazarus (1849-1887) Volume I, 1889?
http://www.digitalbookindex.com/_search/search010litamerican-19thcla.asp
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nnn nnnnnn A B C D ... Z AUTHOR TITLE EDITION FORMAT PRICE PUBORG Labree, Lawrence Rebels and Tories, or, The Blood of the Mohawk! Graphic Html n/c WrightAmFict Lady Alice Granger Graphic Html n/c WrightAmFict Laine, Henry Allen Foot Prints Graphic Html n/c KentuckyDLib Laing, Caroline H. Butler 1804-92 Life in Varied Phases Graphic Html n/c WrightAmFict Laing, Caroline H. Butler 1804-92 The Old Farm House Graphic Html n/c WrightAmFict Lamb, Martha J. 1829-93 Spicy Graphic Html n/c WrightAmFict Lamson, Charles H

77. Midstream Magazine
accomplished protoZionist, Emma Lazarus (1849-1887), very little else was ofmuch literary value. Emma Lazarus, of course, is quite another story.
http://www.midstreamthf.com/200307/feature.html
July/August 2003 Feature Choosing to be Chosen: The Jewish Literary Imagination in America
Carole S. Kessner
In the last decades of the 18th century, when America was a young republic, the novel was dismissed as an inferior literary form, of dubious moral value. Yet a member of the American branch of the prestigious English Franks family, one Isaac Franks, a New Yorker and veteran of the Revolutionary War, rose to defend the lowly novel. Found among the papers of this highly cultivated gentleman was a handwritten defense entitled “On Novel Reading,” dating from 1800. Franks was an avid novel reader and had come to the conclusion that “[i]gnorance and malignity may decry this species of writing; but in my opinion, the names Cervantes, Fielding, Richardson, Smollett, Roche, and Burney will and ought to command the admiration of those who possess feeling, discernment, and taste.”2
The Jews of early America may have been avid readers, but they were not yet writers of novels. The very first evidence of creative literary activity comes from the pen of the Charleston-born Penina Moise (1797-1880), whose volume of verse, Fancy’s Sketch Book, published in 1833, was the first book of poetry by a Jew — male or female — to be published in America. Though her verse was not especially inspired, it is worth noting that at a time when most Jews avoided writing about Jewish subjects (particularly in non-Jewish publications), in 1820, Moise contributed a poem to the Southern Patriot that prefigures Emma Lazarus’s famous sonnet affixed to the Statue of Liberty:

78. All National Women's History Month Honorees
Emma Lazarus (18491887) Poet, Translator Lazarus is best known for her sonnetThe New Colossus which is inscribed on the base of the Stature of Liberty.
http://www.nwhp.org/whm/all-honorees.html
NWHP 2005 Theme "Women Change America" 2005 Theme The 2005, Women's History Month theme, "Women Change America," honors and recognizes the role of American women in transforming culture, history and politics as leaders, writers, scientists, educators, politicians, artists, historians, and informed citizens. "Women Change America" also celebrates the myriad ways in which the spirit, courage, and contributions of American women have added to the vitality, richness, and diversity of American life. In 2005, all previous Women's History Week and Month Honorees will be recognized and celebrated as we explore how "Women Change America." The National Women's History Project would like to thank Jennifer Kennedy, Christie Rubio, and Margaret Zierdt for their work in researching, writing, and editing the paragraphs on the 145 former National Women's History Week/Month Honorees.
"Women Change America" Gazette
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79. New Non-Fiction At The OWHL
Lazarus, Emma, 18491887. 811 L457SE Check Amazon by ISBN Check Amazon by Title Selected poems Roethke, Theodore, 1908-1963. 811 R62SE
http://www.andover.edu/library/BOOKLISTS/nnf0305.htm
Oliver Wendell Holmes Library Catalog Resource Guides Databases ... What's New Non-Fiction Materials recently added to the Collection Art History and Social Sciences Math Music ... World Languages
New Materials in Support of the Art Curriculum Click on the titles below to search the catalog The Colonial revival in America
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Summer stock! : an American theatrical phenomenon

LoMonaco, Martha Schmoyer.
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Black art : a cultural history

Powell, Richard J., 1953-
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Learning in and through art : a guide to discipline-based art education

Dobbs, Stephen M. Check Amazon by ISBN Check Amazon by Title The arts and the creation of mind Eisner, Elliot W. Check Amazon by ISBN Check Amazon by Title Art education and human development Gardner, Howard.

80. A2.2OXF REF Knowles, Elizabeth The Oxford Dictionary Of Quotations
Lazarus, Emma, 18491887. Poems. Selections Selected poems Library of America, 2005.R39.20Sel Ashbery, John Selected prose / John Ashbery ; edited by
http://www.efl.ox.ac.uk/EFLACC-April05.html
A2.2OXF REF
Knowles, Elizabeth
The Oxford dictionary of quotations, 6th ed.

Oxford University Press, 2004
Alvarez, A. (Alfred), 1929-
The writer's voice

Bloomsbury, 2005
Armstrong, Richard, 1959-
Understanding realism

BFI, 2005
Dyer, Richard Now you see it : studies in lesbian and gay film, 2nd ed. / Richard Dyer with Julianne Pidduck. Routledge, 2003 Grant, Barry Keith, 1947- Documenting the documentary : close readings of documentary film and video Wayne State University Press, 1998 Heylin, Clinton Despite the system : Orson Welles versus the Hollywood studios Canongate, 2005 Modleski, Tania, 1949- The women who knew too much : Hitchcock and feminist theory Routledge, 1989 Holmlund, Chris Contemporary American independent film : from the margins to the mainstream Routledge, 2005 McDonald, Paul, 1963- The star system : Hollywood's production of popular identities Wallflower, 2000 Ryan, Marie-Laure, 1946- Narrative across media : the languages of storytelling University of Nebraska Press, 2004 Stam, Robert, 1941- Literature and film : a guide to the theory and practice of film adaptation Blackwell, 2005

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