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  1. Debora Vogel, Dvoyre Fogel (Burshtýn, Imperio austrohúngaro actual Ucrania, 4 de enero de 1900 – Gueto de Leópolis,Lviv, agosto de 1942) fue una filósofa y poetisa polaca. Activa en círculos literarios yidis aunque no fuera su primera lengua, escribió también en polaco , alemán y hebreo .

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Debora_VogelDebora Vogel - Wikipedia

    Debora Vogel (1900–1942) was a philosopher and poet who published work in Yiddish and Polish. During World War I her family fled to Vienna and moved later to Lviv (known as Lemberg in German and Yiddish and Lwów in Polish), where Vogel spent most of her life.

  3. www.wikiwand.com › es › Debora_VogelDebora Vogel - Wikiwand

    Debora Vogel, Dvoyre Fogel fue una filósofa y poetisa polaca. Activa en círculos literarios yidis aunque no fuera su primera lengua, escribió también en polaco, alemán y hebreo.

  4. From mid-1927 to mid-1932, Debora Vogel served as the director of the orphanage and challenged her students with complex questions and reading tasks designed to enable them to develop their own thoughts and autonomous forms of life. There are clear parallels between Vogel’s educational and literary work, as will be demonstrated in what follows.

  5. 13 de ago. de 2019 · Debora Vogel was a brilliant multilingual poet and aesthete who is best known as the muse of Bruno Schulz. But her work deserves a reading—in German, Polish, Hebrew, and especially Yiddish. by

  6. Deb­o­ra Vogel’s 1935 essay, Lwows­ka Jud­e­ria, gives us a valu­able snap­shot of Lwów’s 1 Jew­ish streets with an eye to the modern. 2 On the one hand, it pro­vides us infor­ma­tion on the vibrant Jew­ish life in the city — which was large­ly anni­hi­lat­ed by World War II — and on the oth­er, it is a poet­ic text that reflects Vogel’s unique ...

  7. 7 de jun. de 2023 · Polish Cultural Institute in New York. 963 subscribers. 24. 398 views 4 months ago. Debora Vogel with Anastasiya Lyubas and Karolina Szymaniak Debora Vogel (1902-42) was a Yiddish and...