Brief Hours and Weeks is the author’s account of growing up in a small, tightly knit, first-generation Polish-Jewish community in Cape Town in the 1940s, 50s, and 60s.
Observing through at first naive and then later more sophisticated eyes, he describes his childhood and youth in a protective off-the-boat immigrant Jewish family in very British-Commonwealth South Africa as apartheid becomes increasingly coercive.
Through vivid and candid personal stories, he brings to life a time, place, culture, people, and set of mores that no longer exist. At 21, he leaves Africa to study in America.
Tabla de materias
Chapter 1. Separation Anxiety
Chapter 2. Prost or Eidel
Chapter 3. Coloureds, Whites, Gentiles and Jews
Chapter 4. Deaths, Girls, Songs
Chapter 5. ‘For This I Didn’t Come to South Africa’
Chapter 6. Charton, Woodburn Crescent, Oranjezicht,
Cape Town, South Africa, The World, The Solar System,
The Universe
Chapter 7. Joseph Chaim and His Brothers
Chapter 8. In the Hood
Chapter 9. The Isle of Capri
Chapter 10. Six Moral Tales
Chapter 11. Summertime
Chapter 12. The Unmentioned
Chapter 13. School’s Out
Chapter 14. La Vie En Rose, Part I
Chapter 15. La Vie En Rose, Part 2
Chapter 16. La Vie En Rose, Part 3: Da Capo Al Fine
Chapter 17. The Transmigration of Souls
Chapter 18. Crimes, Sins, and Misdemeanours
Chapter 19. Transformers
Chapter 20. Epiphanies
Chapter 21. Time’s Fool
Chapter 22. This Sporting Life
Chapter 23. The Cult and I
Chapter 24. Some Bits About My Character
Chapter 25. The Red and The Black
Chapter 26. Distant Drums
Chapter 27. 1966 and All That …
Chapter 28. All the Leaves Are Brown …
Sobre el autor
Emanuel Derman is the author of My Life as a Quant, the 2004 memoir that first introduced the quant world to a wide audience. He is also the author of Models.Behaving.Badly, a meditation on the critical difference between models in the physical sciences and those in the social sciences. He is a frequent contributor to X/twitter at @Emanuel Derman Brief Hours and Weeks is a memoir of childhood and youth in Cape Town. The author likes the remark by Sheila Heti: ‘The self’s report on itself is surely a great fiction.’Derman was born in South Africa but has spent most of his professional years in Manhattan in New York City, where he made contributions to several fields. He started out as a theoretical physicist, doing research on unified theories of elementary particle interactions. At AT&T Bell Laboratories in the 1980s he developed programming languages for business modeling. From 1985 to 2002 he worked on Wall Street, running quantitative strategies research groups in fixed income, equities, and risk management at Goldman Sachs, where he was appointed a managing director in 1997. The two financial models he developed with colleagues there, the Black-Derman-Toy interest rate model and the local volatility model, have become widely used industry standards. From 2003 to 2023 he was head of the Master’s Program in Financial Engineering at Columbia, where he is now Professor of Professional Practice Emeritus. In both of his books Derman points out the dangers that inevitably accompany the use of models, which are merely limited metaphors that compare something you would like to understand with something similar, but not identical, that you already understand. He was named the IAFE Financial Engineer of the Year in 2000. He has a Ph D in theoretical physics from Columbia University and is the author of numerous articles in elementary particle physics, computer science, and finance.