Yiddish and Antisemitism: Literary and Political Strategies of Resistance

Tue Feb 04 2025 at 12:30 pm to 01:30 pm

60 5th Ave | New York

NYU Center for the Study of Antisemitism
Publisher/HostNYU Center for the Study of Antisemitism
Yiddish and Antisemitism: Literary and Political Strategies of Resistance
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Light lunch is provided at 12:00pm. Program begins at 12:30pm.
About this Event

Miriam Udel, “‘It’s Hard to Be a Jew’: How Yiddish Children’s Literature Framed Antisemitism”

William Pimlott, "The Yiddish Politics of Fighting Antisemitism in the 20th Century"

Over a million Eastern European Jews migrated to the United States, Argentina, Britain and a range of other destinations towards the end of the 19th century, carrying with them the Yiddish language and its press, literature, theatre and cinema, as well as establishing Yiddish schools. The “mother tongue” was the natural medium for Ashkenazi Jews to confront the new-old forms of prejudice that they encountered. Miriam Udel will consider how educational leaders and children’s authors framed the experience of antisemitism for a new generation, and what strategies of resistance they implicitly called for. William Pimlott will address how the Yiddish public sphere offered a relatively secure location to discuss and analyse antisemitism in private - and organise to fight it. Sandra Fox will moderate.

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Event Venue & Nearby Stays

60 5th Ave, 60 5th Avenue, New York, United States

Tickets

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