Curt Leviant

Summary

Curt Leviant (born 1932, Vienna[1]) is a retired Jewish Studies professor, as well as a novelist and translator.

Curt Leviant
Born1932 (age 91–92)
Vienna, Austria
OccupationAuthor, Translator, Professor
NationalityAmerican
Notable works
  • The Yemenite Girl
  • The Man Who Thought He Was Messiah

Personal life and career edit

His parents were Jacques and Fenia Leviant. They spoke Yiddish at home, and encouraged their son's interest in Yiddish literature and theater.[2]

He came to the United States in 1938.[1] He took a BA from CUNY (Brooklyn), followed in 1957 by an MA from Columbia,[3] with a thesis on Lamed Shapiro.[4] From 1960, he taught Hebraic studies at Rutgers, taking a PhD there in 1966 with a doctoral thesis that was a translation with commentary, published in 1969 as King Artur: A Hebrew Authurian Romance of 1279.[5][6] [7]

He married Erika Leah Pfeifer, they had three daughters, Dalya, Dvora, Shulamit.[8]

Leviant was also a book reviewer, usually of Jewish authors, with reviews appearing in The New York Times, The Nation, and other publications, especially Jewish media. In more recent years, he has been, co-authoring with his wife, a Jewish travel writer.

According to Lewis Fried, "his fiction is nuanced, surprising, and often arabesque, dealing with the demands of the present and the claims of the past."[9]

Novels edit

  • The Yemenite Girl. Bobbs-Merrill, 1977; Avon/Bard Books, 1978; Syracuse University Press, 1999
    • expansion of a 1973 short story of the same title, published in The Literary Review, Fall 1973.
    • winner of the Edward Lewis Wallant Award
  • Passion in the Desert Avon/Bard Books, 1980
  • The Man Who Thought He Was Messiah. Jewish Publication Society, 1990
  • Partita in Venice. Livingston Press, 1999
  • Diary of an Adulterous Woman: A Novel: Including an ABC Dictionary That Offers Alphabetical Tidbits and Surprises. Syracuse University Press, 2001
  • A Novel of Kalss. Livingston, 2008
  • Katz or Cats, or How Jesus Became my Rival in Love. Dzanc Books, 2018

Shorter fiction edit

  • Ladies and Gentlemen, the Original Music of the Hebrew Alphabet and Weekend in Mustara: Two Novellas. University of Wisconsin Press, 2002
  • Zix Zexy Ztories. Texas Tech University Press, 2012

Translations edit

Leviant has translated from Hebrew and Yiddish to English, including:

References edit

  1. ^ a b Harry Zohn, Österreichische Juden in der Literatur (Olamenu, 1969), p. 37.
  2. ^ From his thanks to his parents in some of his Sholom Aleichem translations, Stories and Satires (1959) and Old Country Tales (1966), including their help with obscure Yiddish idioms, especially those of Russian origin.
  3. ^ Rutgers Catalog, p. 88
  4. ^ Cited in
  5. ^ Cecil Roth, Encyclopaedia Judaica (Encyclopaedia Judaica, 1996: ISBN 965-07-0219-9), Vol. 1, p. 33.
  6. ^ The Writers Directory, 31st edition, St. James Press (part of Gale, Cengage Learning) 2013
  7. ^ Rutgers Catalog, p. 88
  8. ^ From the dedication to Masterpieces of Hebrew Literature, Ktav, 1969.
  9. ^ "Leviant, Curt" entry in Encyclopaedia Judaica, 2nd edition, 2007, v. 12, p. 696.

External links edit

  • Review: Curt Leviant's witty 'A Novel of Klass'. Orlando Sentinel, December 7, 2008. Accessed 2011-03-01.
  • Leviant on Chaim Grade Jewish Action
  • Leviant on Chaim Grade Jewish Review of Books
  • "Se l'amore fa dimenticare persino l'aleph bet", Sette - October 4th 2013 Leviant interview with an Italian newspaper. He implies an age that would have meant he wrote his master's thesis at age 13 and was on the Rutgers faculty at age 16.