Joseph Freeman | |
---|---|
Born | October 7, 1897 |
Died | August 8, 1965 New York City |
(aged 68)
Citizenship | American |
Education | Columbia University |
Occupation | Editor, journalist, author |
Years active | 1920-1961 |
Employer | The Liberator', The New Masses, Partisan Review |
Known for | co-founding editor of Partisan Review |
Spouse(s) | Ione Robinson (first), Charmion von Wiegand (second) |
Parent(s) | Stella Freeman, Isaac Freeman |
Relatives | Harry Freeman (journalist) |
Joseph "Joe" Freeman (1897–1965) was an American writer and magazine editor. He is best remembered as an editor of The New Masses, a literary and artistic magazine closely associated with the Communist Party USA, and as a founding editor of the magazine Partisan Review.
Joseph Freeman was born October 7, 1897, in the village of Piratin, part of the Poltava district in the Ukraine, which was then part of the Russian empire. Freeman's parents, Stella and Isaac Freeman, were of ethnic Jewish extraction, forced to live in the Pale of Settlement by the anti-semitic laws of the Tsarist regime. At the behest of his grandfather, Freeman spoke Yiddish as a small boy. His parents worked as shopkeepers.
In his memoirs, Freeman recalled a traumatic boyhood incident which had followed shortly after a pogrom of the Jewish population of a neighboring town:
Less than a week later a bearded peasant came into my mother's store drunk. He asked for tobacco in a voice that frightened me, and my mother handed him a package.
"I'm not going to pay you," he said. "You filthy Jews get too much money." "Then you can't have the tobacco." The peasant took a clasp knife from his pocket. He opened the long blade and brandished it at my mother. "I'll kill you," he growled. Then he walked over to me and brandished the knife over my head. "We'll have a nice little pogrom. We'll kill all the goddam Jews in this goddam town."
Along with hundreds of thousands of others fleeing ethnic violence in Russia, the Freemans emigrated to the United States in 1904. Joseph was naturalized as a US citizen in 1920. In the new world, the Freemans managed to achieve a middle class existence in Brooklyn, New York, with Isaac Freeman earning a living in America as a real estate dealer.