Joel Carmichael

Joel Carmichael
Born Joel Lipsky
(1915-12-31)December 31, 1915
New York City
Died January 27, 2006(2006-01-27) (aged 90)
Manhattan
Occupation historian, magazine editor, translator
Nationality American
Ethnicity Polish and Latvian American
Notable works The Death of Jesus
Spouse Mary Carr Thomas
Elizabeth de Cuevas
Children 3
Relatives Eleazar Lipsky (brother), David Lipsky (brother)

Joel Carmichael (1915–2006) was an American historian, magazine editor, and translator.

Biography

Early life and education

Born Joel Lipsky on December 31, 1915 in New York City, Carmichael was the youngest son of Charlotte Schacht and Louis Lipsky, a founder of the American Zionist movement. His oldest brother, David (1907–1996) became a publicist; his middle brother, Eleazar (1911–1993), was a lawyer, novelist, journalist, playwright and active Zionist.[1]

Following graduation from high school, he was sent for a year to Palestine. There he began learning Arabic before returning to New York and attending Columbia University. In England, a chance meeting with an Oxford don turned him to read Greek and Russian at Oxford.[2]

Career

His first book, a translation of a memoir of the Russian Revolution, helped Carmichael land a contract with Oxford University Press.[2] From there, he wrote numerous titles on early Christianity, Arab history and Russian history, and translated Anna Karenina for a new paperback edition. One book, The Death of Jesus, was translated into eight languages. Carmichael was also editor of Midstream, a Zionist magazine, for 24 years, serving from 1975–1988 and 1990-2001.

Marriage and family

Carmichael was married twice: first to the journalist Mary Carr Thomas, then to sculptor Elizabeth de Cuevas in 1960.[3] He had three children.

His granddaughter is the filmmaker Emily Carmichael.

Death

Carmichael died January 27, 2006 in Manhattan.

Published works

Translations

This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.

See also

References

  1. "Guide to the Lipsky Family Papers, 1904-1992 (bulk 1925-1992)". Center for Jewish History.
  2. 1 2 Duncan, Erika (1995-03-19). "ENCOUNTERS; Separating History From Conditions of Religion". New York Times.
  3. "Joel Carmichael Weds Mrs. Elizabeth Faure". New York Times. 1960-04-30. p. 20.
  4. Salisbury, Harrison E. (1960-10-02). "Background for Today; AN ILLUSTRATED HISTORY OF RUSSIA.". New York Times.
  5. Seidenspinner, Clarence (1963-02-17). "Jesus Interpreted as a Revolutionist". Chicago Tribune.
  6. Wolfe, Bertram D. (1955-05-15). "A BUSYBODY'S NOTES ON REVOLUTION; One Man's Account of the Scenes, Moods And Deeds in Russia's Year of Decision". New York Times.
  7. Baumbach, Jonathan (1965-06-13). "Weird Like Reality; THE GIANT DWARFS: A Contribution.". New York Times.

External links

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