Yiddish literature - translation to Αγγλικά
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Yiddish literature - translation to Αγγλικά

GENRE OF WRITTEN MATERIAL
Yiddish Literature; Yiddish poetry; Judaeo-German literature; Old Yiddish literature
  • Leading poet [[Abraham Sutzkever]] (1913–2010) was among the Modernists of the 1930s "Young Vilna" group in [[Vilnius]], a historical centre of Yiddish culture. After the War he revived Yiddish in [[Tel Aviv]] and depicted the [[Holocaust]]
  • romance]] in Yiddish, its name later passed into popular phrase as "bubbe meise"-"grandmother's tale"
  • The painter [[Marc Chagall]] at the front, and the Yiddish writer [[Der Nister]] (1884–1950) behind him, with school teachers and children near Moscow in 1923. The writer's pseudonym, "The Hidden One", reflected his interest in symbols and esoteric Jewish ideas. He returned to Russia to join the Yiddish flowering, but fell victim to the Purges.
  • mysticism]] over rationalism
  • 2009 Ukrainian stamp of [[Sholem Aleichem]] (1859-1916). Together with [[Mendele Mocher Sforim]] and [[I. L. Peretz]], the three "classic" Yiddish writers, he helped found the latter 19th-century cultural and artistic [[Yiddish Renaissance]] movement of Eastern Europe.

Yiddish literature         
Letteratura Yiddish
folk literature         
LITERARY GENRE
Orature; Oral Literature; Oratures; Folk literature; Folk Literature
letteratura popolare
Yiddish theater         
GENRE IN THEATER
Yiddish Theater; Yiddish Theatre; Yiddish theater; Yiddish Drama; Yiddish stage; Theater Yiddish; Theatre Yiddish
Teatro Yiddish

Ορισμός

Yiddish
Yiddish is a language which comes mainly from German and is spoken by many Jewish people of European origin.
N-UNCOUNT

Βικιπαίδεια

Yiddish literature

Yiddish literature encompasses all those belles-lettres written in Yiddish, the language of Ashkenazic Jewry which is related to Middle High German. The history of Yiddish, with its roots in central Europe and locus for centuries in Eastern Europe, is evident in its literature.

It is generally described as having three historical phases: Old Yiddish literature; Haskalah and Hasidic literature; and modern Yiddish literature. While firm dates for these periods are hard to pin down, Old Yiddish can be said to have existed roughly from 1300 to 1780; Haskalah and Hasidic literature from 1780 to about 1890; and modern Yiddish literature from 1864 to the present.

Παραδείγματα από το σώμα κειμένου για Yiddish literature
1. In between Soviet pogroms and the Vietnam War, Horn, a doctoral candidate in Hebrew and Yiddish literature, stuffs in as many Yiddish tales as the book will hold.
2. But unlike Yiddish literature, Yiddish language and other phenomena of Jewish culture in Europe, the heritage of science and scholarship in Yiddish experienced neither an academic nor a public revival in recent decades.
3. Within 15 years of its inception the centre had become one of the leading institutions for the study of Hebrew and Jewish subjects in the world, with a wide range of interests from the Dead Sea Scrolls to Yiddish literature.
4. Ruth Wisse, professor of Yiddish literature, expressed distaste for "the faculty attacks" on Mr Summers calling them "wasteful and demoralising". "I am sure that the people who are hounding him cannot wait to get to February 28," she said.
5. When they walked into this synagogue it was walking into a breath of fresh air. ... It was a place where they basically learned how to be Americans, as well as good Jews." The Museum at Eldridge Street will host programs about vaudeville music, Yiddish literature, family history research and other topics.