Blog

Essays, interviews, listicles, podcasts, and much more, covering all aspects of Yiddish culture.

Blog

Speaking Through Shylock's Lips: The Merchant of Venice on The Yiddish Stage

Eve Romm traces the many approaches to resolving the problem of Shylock on the Yiddish stage, from apologetics to heroism.

Blog

The Continent: Thoughts Toward the Space of Contemporary Yiddishism

Editing collected volumes of Yiddish writing during WWII, Melekh Ravitsh and Moyshe Rosenberg imagined a forum for the exchange of information, research, and ideas with the goal of developing strong ties between Jewish communities throughout the American continents.


Blog

Briv funem arkhiv: Bundist Liebmann Hersch Visits Palestine

From the collections of the University of Capetown, recently damaged by fire, an important document of Bundist history and a reminder of the global breadth - and precarity - of Yiddish archives.

Blog

Savoring Honey on the Page: An interview with Illustrator Paula Cohen

Margaret Frothingham and Paula Cohen discuss fire trucks, folktales, and other considerations in Cohen’s illustrations for this new treasury of Yiddish children’s stories.

Blog

Hasidic Songs about Coronavirus: A Wonderful Voice of Renewal / חסידישע קאראנע-לידער א וואונדערליכע שטימע פון חידוש

The phenomenon of Corona songs in the frum world shows us that something quite new is happening with regard to Hasidic music.

Interview

To open up a theme and make some inroads into it: An Interview with Gennady Estraikh and Mikhail Krutikov about the Studies in Yiddish Legenda Book Series

Ayelet Brinn discusses Professors Gennady Estraikh’s and Mikhail Krutikov’s long-running series, Studies in Yiddish, for Legenda, and the changes they’ve seen in academic publishing and Yiddish studies over the course of the past twenty years.

Blog

Freidus, Borokhov, and the Café Royal

Baker explores the career of Abraham S. Freidus, a reclusive, pioneering, and Yiddish-theater-loving Judaica librarian. His research reveals the tight nexus that existed a century ago between a small coterie of Eastern European-born Judaica librarians in the United States; their philanthropic patrons of Central European background; and the largely male, Yiddish-speaking readers who frequented the important Jewish libraries of that era.

Blog

Asch Wednesday at the White House

On Wednesday, February 26, President Joseph R. Biden announced in a press briefing that he will be hosting Asch Wednesday 2022 at the White House.

Blog

From Glitches to Gold: Innovative Pedagogy in the Virtual Classroom

Technology glitches and COVID-era difficulties are opportunities to be creative and think on our toes.

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