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Yoel Hoffmann (born 1937) is a contemporary Jewish author, editor, scholar and translator. He is currently a professor of Japanese poetry, Buddhism, and philosophy at Haifa University in Israel and lives in Galilee.
[edit] BiographyBorn in Romania to Austro-Hungarian Jewish parents, at the age of one Hoffmann and his parents fled a Europe increasingly under Nazi influence for the British Mandate of Palestine. Shortly after the move Hoffmann's mother died, and he was entrusted by his father to an orphanage where he spent his time until his father re-married. As a young man, Hoffmann left his home in Israel and traveled to Japan, where he spent two years living in a Zen monastery and studying Chinese and Japanese texts with monks. He would later return to Japan to earn his doctorate. Hoffmann did not begin writing fiction until in his forties, and though chronologically a member of the sixties "Generation of the State," his work is oft-described as being on the forefront of avant-garde Hebrew literature. Hoffmann's first book of fiction, Katschen - The Book of Joseph, was published in Hebrew in 1988. He has since gone on to write nine more books in Hebrew, five of which have been translated into English and published by New Directions; these five are Katschen and The Book of Joseph (1998), Bernhard (1998), The Christ of Fish (1999), The Heart is Katmandu (2001), and The Shunra and the Schmetterling (2004). Hoffmann was awarded the first ever Koret Jewish Book Award, as well as the Bialik Prize by the city of Tel Aviv, and the Prime Minister's Prize. Hoffmann's latest book is Curriculum Vitae and is set to be published in June 2009 by New Directions. [edit] Selected bibliography[edit] Writings by the author
[edit] Editor & Translator
[edit] Further reading
Categories: Jewish writers | Jewish scholars | Jewish Japanologists | Japanologists | University of Haifa faculty | Hungarian-Romanians | Romanian immigrants to Israel | Hungarian immigrants to Israel | Israeli Jews | Austro-Hungarian Jews | Romanians of Austrian descent | Hungarian Jews | Romanian Jews | 1937 births | Living people | Jewish history stubs | Israeli people stubs | Hungarian people stubs | Romanian people stubs | Austrian people stubs |
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