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Ben Field (US author)

Ben Field (US author)

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Biography

Ben Field (pseudonym of Moe Bragin), (October 15, 1900 – June 14, 1986), was an American writer who authored four novels and numerous short stories, poems, and essays.

Life and career

Moe Bragin was five years old when he arrived at Ellis Island on March 25, 1906 with his then 26-year-old mother, Bessie, and a younger brother Jacob. They were to join their father, Joseph Bragin, who had come earlier. He attended the New York City public schools and got his baccalaureate degree from the City College of New York in 1923 and his Master of Arts degree from Columbia University in 1928. Although primarily a writer, he taught for many years at the Hebrew Institute of Boro Park. In earlier years and in the summers, when a steady income was needed, he worked variously as a machinist, a logger, a farmhand.

He started writing during the Depression Years using his own name and started to use the pseudonym, Ben Field, in 1934. The thirties and forties was a productive period for him as a creative author. His early reputation was established by short stories that are anthologized with the likes of William Faulkner, Ernest Hemingway, Katherine Porter, Eudora Welty and John Steinbeck. His first major work was a collection of short stories, The Cock's Funeral, published in 1937 with an introduction by Erskine Caldwell. This was followed by three novels, Outside Leaf, Piper Tompkins, The Last Freshet, all published in the forties. Although he continued to write short stories, it was not until 1971 that he wrote his fifth novel, Jacob's Son He died in South Pasadena, California in June 1986. He was a member of the League of American Writers.

Recent Research

With the advent of the Internet, a lot of information has surfaced regarding Ben Field's works. A recent article by Michael Whitworth[1] describes how the Scottish poet Hugh Macdiarmid extensively used and adapted prose from sources that include Ben Field's (Moe Bragin's) essay "Obituary for Jewish Art Theater" for MacDiarmid's poem, 'Etika Preobrazhennavo Erosa'. Some personal correspondence between Ben Field and novelist Jack Conroy are preserved among Conroy's papers at the special collections of the Newberry Library in Chicago, Illinois.[2]. Some recent books on the literary left of the twentieth century cite a few of Moe Bragin's writings.

Published Works

Major Works

  • The Cock's Funeral. With an Introduction by Erskine Caldwell. NY: International Publishers, 1937.
  • Outside Leaf. NY: Reynal & Hitchcock, 1943.
  • Piper Tompkins. Garden City, NY: Doubleday & Company, Inc., 1946.
  • The Last Freshet. Garden City, NY: Doubleday & Company, Inc., 1948.
  • Jacob's Son. NY: Crown Publishers, Inc., 1971.

Short Stories and Poems

  • "The Japanese Kimono" in Copy, 1930: Stories, Plays, Poems, and Essays. NY: E. Appleton and Company, 1930, pp. 38–47.
  • "Work" in Prairie Schooner, Vol. 4, Number 3, Summer 1930, p. 144. (Also published in The Menorah Journal, Vol. XIX, Number 4, June 1931, pp. 447–452.)
  • "A New York Form" in The Stratford Magazine, Vol. V, Number 6, July 1930, 00. 20–24.
  • "From an Eastern Farm: Night – The Farmer's Daughter" in Poetry: A Magazine of Verses, Vol. XXXVII, Number IV, January 1931, 00. 200–201.
  • "Cow" in The Hound & Horn, Vol. IV, Number 4, July–September 1931, p. 556–568. Anthologized in Granville Hicks et al, eds., Proletarian Literature in the United States: An Anthology, NY: International Publishers, 1935, pp. 71–79; as well as in Jack Salzman, ed. Years of Protest: A Collection of American Writings of the 1930's, NY: Pegasus, 1967, pp. 311–319.
  • "In Egypt" in Dorothy Scarborough, ed., Selected Short Stories of Today. NY: Farrar & Rinehart, 1935, pp. 174–188. (Also published in The Massachusetts Review: A Quarterly of Literature, the Arts and Public Affairs, Vol. 1, Number 3, May 1960, pp. 417–437.)
  • "The Praying Mantis" in The New Republic, February 3, 1932, p. 322.
  • "The Sheep Dip" in Partisan Review, Vol. I, Number 1, February–March 1934, pp. 24–31.
  • "The Eclipse" in Partisan Review, Vol. I, Number 3, June–July 1934, pp. 27–29.
  • "The Grasshopper is Stirring!" in Granville Hicks et al, eds., Proletarian Literature in the United States: An Anthology, NY: International Publishers, 1935, pp. 71–79.
  • "The Market" in John Lehmann, ed., New Writing, London: Lawrence and Wishart, 1937, pp. 225–234.
  • "Whom the Ox Gored" in New Directions in Prose &Poetry, 1941 Mount Vernon: New Directions, 1941, pp. 391–406.
  • "The New Housekeeper" in Nicholas Moore, ed., The Book of Modern American Short Stories, London: Editions Poetry, 1945, pp. 149–160.
  • "An Answer for My Uncle" in Kerker Quinn and Charles Shattuck, eds., Accent Anthology, NY: Harcourt, Brace and Company, 1946, pp. 87–98.
  • "A Lesson" in Joseph Gaer, ed., Our Lives: American Labor Stories, NY: Boni and Gaer, 1948, pp. 96–102.
  • "The Little Jew, My Brother" in The California Quarterly, Vol. 3, Number 4, 1955, pp. 3–19.
  • "Maxie Ganew" in Maxim Lieber, ed., Das Amerikanische Jahrhundert, Leipzig: Paul List Verlag, 1957, pp. 210–229. Trans. Arthur Bagemühl.
  • "Three Sisters" in Massachusetts Review: A Quarterly of Literature, the Arts and Public Affairs, Volume 1, Number 3, May 1960, pp. 417–437.

Essays

  • "Obituary for Jewish Art Theater" in The Hound & Horn, Vol. XX, January–March 1932, pp. 283–287.
  • "Journal of a Tour in America" in The American Mercury, Vol, XXVI, June 1932, pp. 199–208.
  • "Israel Zangwill: A Vital Force" in Morris U. Schappes, ed., "Jewish Currents" Reader, NY: Jewish Currents, Inc., 1966, pp. 240–246.

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