ContentsScope and Contents of the Collection |
Perell papers, 1935-1950 (bulk 1941-1949)Finding AidEncoding funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.© 2003
Biographical NoteEmile Perell (original surname, Perelmutter) trained as an engineer at a polytechnic school in Europe, worked doing odd jobs, and taught mathematics at the boarding house operated by his sister, Dora Perelmutter Pasmanik. Prior to 1942 he immigrated to the United States where he lived in Greenwich Village, New York, for thirty years. For two years he worked to establish himself as an engineer in preparation for his family's immigration to the United States. In 1942 his sister immigrated to New York City from Hyeres, France. Accompanying her were her daughter Rachel Bespaloff, son-in-law Nisson Bespaloff, and granddaughter Naomi Levinson. Return to the Table of Contents Scope and Contents of the CollectionThe Emile Perell Papers chiefly consist of correspondence written in French or English. A few letters are written by Perell, but most are letters written to him by relatives, friends, and associates between 1942 and 1949. Correspondents include his niece, Rachel Bespaloff, and his sister, Dora Perelmutter Pasmanik. Rachel Bespaloff was a French professor at Mount Holyoke College, a lecturer at the Entretiens de Pontigny, an author, and a philosopher. Also included is the correspondence of Bespaloff's daughter Naomi Levinson; Arthur Younger, a publisher in New York; Paul Frederic Saintonge, one of Bespaloff's collegues at Mount Holyoke, and friends or relatives of Bespaloff named, Fanny Ettinger, Hermine Zohrab and Fernande Peyrot Parsons. Most of the letters discuss personal and family matters, such as Pasmanik's ill health and Levinson's education at Mount Holyoke College and Radcliffe College. A few letters by Bespaloff and Ettinger discuss conditions in Europe during World War II. Correspondence with Younger and Saintonge concern the publication of Bespaloff's work and events after her suicide in 1949. The collection also includes published articles by Bespaloff dating from 1935, 1943, 1945, and 1947 and a posthumous publicaiton from 1950 on topics such as Reflexions sur l'age classique and The Humanism of Peguy as well as biographical information about her. Materials relating to Levinson, in addition to letters by and to her, consist of a short story that she wrote, an autobiographical essay, biographical information, and her Mount Holyoke senior photo, 1948. Return to the Table of Contents Search TermsReturn to the Table of Contents Organization of the CollectionThis collection is organized into nine series:
Return to the Table of Contents |