Showing Results 1 - 7 of 7
Restricted
Text
The Jewish theme in Ru.Shtetl is a metaphor. The closest mainstream parallel explaining the essence of what Patrick Lisidze conceived of is Siniavskii’s pseudonym, Abram Terts. Terts’s Jewishness was…
Contributor:
Psoy Korolenko
Places:
Moscow, Russia
Date:
2003
Subjects:
Categories:
Restricted
Text
[One] of the most evident features of New York photography has so far not been addressed by writers: the fact that, in every account, the great majority of the photographers concerned were or are Jews…
Contributor:
Max Kozloff
Places:
New York, United States of America
Date:
2002
Subjects:
Categories:
Restricted
Text
The Modern Age is the Jewish Age, and the twentieth century, in particular, is the Jewish Century. Modernization is about everyone becoming urban, mobile, literate, articulate, intellectually…
Contributor:
Yuri Slezkine
Places:
Berkeley, United States of America
Date:
2004
Subjects:
Categories:
Restricted
Text
As Yiddish poetry grew more modern, even modernistic, as it grew freer in rhythm, subtler in tonality, more artful and sophisticated in imagery, it also grew more Jewish—I was almost going to say more…
Contributor:
Abraham Tabachnik
Places:
New York, United States of America
Date:
1950
Subjects:
Categories:
Restricted
Text
The Jewish community as a whole is a unique blend of kinship and consent. […] The fact that Jews are born Jewish places them in a special position to begin with, one that more often than not has…
Contributor:
Daniel J. Elazar
Places:
Philadelphia, United States of America
Date:
1976
Subjects:
Categories:
Restricted
Text
What we now routinely call klezmer in the United States—“Do you play klezmer?” “There’s a new klezmer album out”—is a truly American construct in three ways: the word sidesteps aesthetic and political…
Contributor:
Mark Slobin
Places:
Middletown, United States of America
Date:
2002
Subjects:
Categories:
Restricted
Text
Political modernity, by making the varied dimensions of existence automatic and, in particular, by separating the political from the religious, posed the problem of Jewish identity in a dramatic…
Contributor:
Dominique Schnapper, Chantal Bordes-Benayoun
Places:
Paris, France
Date:
1989