Kaufman, Bel
Variant namesBel Kaufman, a teacher in New York City, wrote Up the Down Staircase in 1964.
From the description of Bel Kaufman papers, 1957-1965. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 122485397
From the guide to the Bel Kaufman papers, 1957-1965, (The New York Public Library. Manuscripts and Archives Division.)
Author; Teacher; Lyricist
From the description of Bel Kaufman papers, 1911-2004 (Smith College). WorldCat record id: 477404163
Belle Kaufman was born in Berlin, Germany on 11 May 1911. She was the daughter of Lala Rabiniwitz and Michael Kaufman, and she the granddaughter of famed Yiddish writer Sholom Aleichem, on whose stories Fiddler on the Roof is based. Kaufman was raised in Odessa and Moscow before emigrating the the U.S. in 1924 at age twelve. Despite knowing no English when she came to the U.S., she graduated from South Side High School (Newark, New Jersey) in 1929, and went on to earn her B.A. magna cum laude from Hunter College (1934), her M.A. from Columbia University in 1936. Kaufman maried Sydney Goldstine in 1940 and they two children, Jonathan Goldstine and Thea Goldstine; the couple later divorced. She taught high school English for many years, was assistant profesor of English at the City University of New York and lecturer at the New School for Social Research, and has taught creative writing seminars and workshops at the University of Florida and the University of Rochester and other institutions. In the 1940s, she changed the spelling of her first name to the more androgynous first name Bel in order to sell a story to Esquire magazine.
Kaufman is best known as the author of Up the Down Staircase (1964), a novel based on her experiences as a New York City high school teacher, which was made into a play and a movie starring Sandy Dennis in 1967. First published by Prentice Hall, her book spent more than a year on the New York Times best-seller list, has sold more than six million copies, been translated into at least 16 languages, and is in its fifty-seventh printing. Kaufman is also the author of Love, Etc. (1979), a novel about coping with the breakup of a marriage, and of many short stories. Kaufman has been a highly sought-after public speaker at education conventions and Jewish organizations throughout the country, and won many honors and awards, including honorary degrees from several colleges and universities. Bel Kaufman died at the age of 103 on July 25, 2014 at her home in Manhattan.
[Source: obituary, NYT July 25, 2014. http://nyti.ms/1t584Q9 ]
From the guide to the Bel Kaufman Papers MS 522., 1911-2004, (Sophia Smith Collection)
Role | Title | Holding Repository | |
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creatorOf | Bel Kaufman Papers MS 522., 1911-2004 | Sophia Smith Collection | |
referencedIn | [Books from the library of Bel Kaufman held in the Slavic and Baltic Division of New York Public Library]. | New York Public Library System, NYPL | |
creatorOf | Kaufman, Bel. Bel Kaufman papers, 1911-2004 | Smith College, Neilson Library | |
creatorOf | Bel Kaufman papers, 1957-1965 | New York Public Library. Manuscripts and Archives Division | |
referencedIn | Guide to the Daily Worker and Daily World Photographs Collection, 1920-2001 | Tamiment Library and Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives | |
creatorOf | Bel Kaufman papers, 1957-1965. | New York State Historical Documents Inventory |
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associatedWith | Communist Party of the United States of America. | corporateBody |
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Active 1957
Active 1965