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Eva Hoffman

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Eva Hoffman (born Ewa Wydra on 1 July 1945)[1] is an internationally acclaimed, award-winning writer and academic.

Early life and education

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Eva Hoffman was born in Kraków, Poland, shortly after World War II. Her parents, Boris and Maria Wydra, survived the Holocaust by hiding in a forest bunker and then by being hidden by Polish and Ukrainian neighbours. In 1959, at the age of 13, she emigrated with her parents and sister to Vancouver, British Columbia. Upon graduating from high school she received a scholarship and studied English literature at Rice University in Houston, Texas, the Yale School of Music, and Harvard University. She received her Ph.D. from Harvard in English and American literature in 1975.[1]

Career

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Hoffman has been a professor of literature and creative writing at various institutions, such as Columbia University, the University of Minnesota, Tufts, MIT, and CUNY's Hunter College. From 1979 to 1990, she worked as an editor and writer at The New York Times, serving as deputy editor of Arts and Leisure, and senior editor of the Book Review, and reviewing regularly herself.[2]

In 1990, she received the Jean Stein Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters and in 1992, the Guggenheim Fellowship for General Nonfiction,[3] as well as the Whiting Award.[4] In 2000, Eva Hoffman was the Year 2000 Una Lecturer at the Townsend Center for the Humanities at the University of California, Berkeley. In 2008, she was awarded an honorary DLitt by the University of Warwick.

She has written and presented programmes for BBC Radio, and is the recipient of the Prix Italia for a radio work combining text and music. She has lectured internationally on subjects of exile, historical memory, human rights  and other contemporary issues. Her work has been translated internationally, and she was awarded an honorary DLitt from Warwick University in 2008. She is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature,[5] and is currently a visiting professor at the Institute for Advanced Studies at University College, London.

In her 1989 memoir, Lost in Translation, Hoffman tells the story of her experience immigrating to America from a post-World War II Poland.[2]

Hoffman presently lives in London.[6]

Family

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She married Barry Hoffman, a fellow Harvard student, in 1971. The couple divorced in 1976.[1]

Works

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  • Lost in Translation: A Life in a New Language (1989)
  • Exit into History: A Journey Through the New Eastern Europe (1993)
  • Shtetl: The Life and Death of a Small Town and the World of Polish Jews (1997)
  • The Secret: A Fable for Our Time (2001)
  • After Such Knowledge: Memory, History and the Legacy of the Holocaust (2004)
  • Illuminations. A Novel (2008), US: Appassionata (2009)
  • Time: Big Ideas, Small Books (2009)
  • How to Be Bored (2016)
  • On Czeslaw Milosz (2023)

Fjellestad writes on Lost in Translation: A Life in a New Language: "[It] is, to the best of my knowledge, the first "postmodern" autobiography written in English by an emigre from a European Communist country." She also writes that in the memoir, "Hoffman re-visions and reconstructs her Polish self through her American identity, and re-examines her American subjectivity through the memory of her Polish selfhood."[7]

References

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Sources

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Grokipedia

from Grokipedia
Eva Hoffman is a Polish-born writer, essayist, and academic known for her memoir ''Lost in Translation: A Life in a New Language'' (1989), which explores her childhood in post-Holocaust Poland and her experiences of immigration, language acquisition, and cultural identity after moving to North America as a teenager. [1] [2] Born in Kraków in 1945 to Jewish parents who survived the Holocaust by hiding in Ukraine, she emigrated with her family to Vancouver, Canada, in 1959 at age 13, before later moving to the United States. [1] Her work frequently addresses themes of displacement, historical trauma, memory, Polish-Jewish relations, and the psychological aftermath of totalitarianism and genocide. Hoffman's early ambition was to become a concert pianist, and she studied music in Poland, Canada, and at Yale before shifting to literature and writing, earning a PhD in English from Harvard University. [1] She worked at The New York Times from 1980 to 1990 in features and arts sections, contributing to her development as a cultural critic and journalist. [1] Her non-fiction books include ''Exit into History'' (1993), an examination of post-communist societies in Eastern Europe, and ''Shtetl'' (1997), a study of Jewish-Gentile relations in a Polish border town. [2] [1] She has also published fiction, beginning with the novel ''The Secret'' (2001). [2] Hoffman has held teaching and visiting positions at institutions including MIT, the University of East Anglia, and others, and has received fellowships such as from the Guggenheim Foundation. [1] Her writing is noted for its intellectual depth, moral seriousness, and nuanced exploration of identity and history, drawing comparisons to writers like Primo Levi. [1] She has lived in London, among other places, reflecting her own transnational life. [1]

Early Life

Birth and Background

Eva Hoffman was born Ewa Wydra on July 1, 1945, in Kraków, Poland.[3][1] She is the daughter of Jewish parents Boris Wydra and Maria Wydra, both Holocaust survivors who hid in a bunker in the Ukrainian forest and later in an unheated barn to escape the Nazis.[1] Hoffman has a younger sister, Alina.[1] She grew up in post-war Kraków in a modest three-room apartment, experiencing a childhood marked by community solidarity amid difficult times. Her family achieved a middle-class lifestyle through her father's trading activities. Hoffman received piano lessons and was groomed to become a concert pianist.[1] In 1959, at the age of 13, she emigrated with her family to Vancouver, Canada, without knowledge of English.[1]

Career

Eva Hoffman's early ambition was to become a concert pianist. She studied music in Poland, Canada, and at Yale before shifting her focus to literature and writing, eventually earning a PhD in English from Harvard University.[1] From 1980 to 1990, she worked at The New York Times in the features and arts sections, where she developed as a cultural critic and journalist.[1] Her literary career includes major non-fiction works such as ''Exit into History'' (1993), which examines post-communist societies in Eastern Europe, and ''Shtetl'' (1997), a study of Jewish-Gentile relations in a Polish border town. She has also published fiction, beginning with the novel ''The Secret'' (2001).[2][1] Hoffman has held teaching and visiting positions at institutions including MIT and the University of East Anglia, and has received fellowships such as from the Guggenheim Foundation.[1] This section originally described the 2022 independent film Gummy Worm, but that film was co-directed, co-written, co-produced, and cinematographed by a different individual also named Eva Hoffman (full name Eva Lapadat Hoffman), a filmmaker from Minnesota who attended Stanford University and was approximately 23 years old at the time of production.[4] It does not relate to the article subject, Eva Hoffman (born 1945), the Polish-born writer and academic. This content should be removed from the article or moved to a disambiguation page if multiple individuals with this name have notable works.

Other Credits

Appearances

Eva Hoffman appeared as herself in the 1995 Polish documentary short Jedno życie - Eva Hoffman (One Life - Eva Hoffman), directed by Maria Zmarz-Koczanowicz. [5] [6] No other credits in film production are known for the writer Eva Hoffman.

Personal Life

Limited Known Details

Little public information is available about Eva Hoffman's personal life beyond her professional identity as a writer, essayist, and academic. No confirmed details exist regarding marriage, family beyond her parents' Holocaust survival, or precise current residence, though she has lived in London among other places. [1] Sources primarily document her literary works, journalism career, and public commentary on displacement and identity, leaving most private aspects undocumented.
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