How Yiddish Changed America and How America Changed Yiddish
How Yiddish Changed America and How America Changed Yiddish
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ISBN No.: 9781632062628
Pages: 512
Year: 202001
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 46.15
Status: Out Of Print

A wide-ranging, eclectic anthology of work by Yiddish writers. Stavans (Humanities, Latin American, and Latino Culture/Amherst Coll.; The Seventh Heaven: Travels Through Jewish Latin America, 2019, etc.) and Yiddish Book Center academic director Lambert (American Literature/Univ. of Massachusetts, Amherst; Unclean Lips: Obscenity, Jews, and American Culture, 2014, etc.) have assembled an impressive collection of essays, fiction, drama, memoir, poetry, cartoons, and interviews, all showing how "Yiddish is so deeply woven into the fabric of the United States that it can sometimes be difficult to recognize how much it has transformed the world we live in today." Arranged thematically rather than chronologically, the pieces are, in some cases, written by names that general readers will recognize: Irving Howe, Emma Goldman, Isaac Bashevis Singer, Allen Ginsberg, Cynthia Ozick, Grace Paley, Michael Chabon, Alan Alda, Leonard Nimoy, and Elliott Gould. Others will be news to many readers--and mostly good news.


The editors provide a brief introduction to each major division of the text and to each contributor. The arrangement of the text is sensible, and the editors show us that American Yiddish writing expands well beyond the United States; they include pieces from Canada, Colombia, Cuba, and Mexico. Among all these are some stunners--e.g., "Oedipus in Brooklyn," a story by Blume Lempel (1907-1999) that begins with the line, "Sylvia was no Jocasta." Emma Goldman (1869-1940) writes fiercely about marriage, which she compares to an "iron yoke." In a poem about Coney Island, Victor Packer (1897-1958) writes, "Beauty and crudity / Go hand in hand and / Launch a united front / Right there on the sand." Ozick (b.


1928) compares Sholem Aleichem to Dickens, Twain, and Will Rogers. "He was a popular presence, and stupendously so. His lectures and readings were mobbed; he was a household friend; he was cherished as a family valuable." For readers unfamiliar with Yiddish writing, a revelation; for readers and aficionados of the language, a treasure.


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