Skip to product information
1 of 1

A Taytsh Manifesto

A Taytsh Manifesto

Yiddish, Translation, and the Making of Modern Jewish Culture

Paperback

Regular price £29.78
Regular price Sale price £29.78

Join our rewards scheme and earn 90 reward points on this purchase!

Earn 90 points on this!

Sign in or Sign up!
View full details
  • Release Date: 01/10/2024
  • Barcode: 9781531509170
  • Genre: Poetry & Drama
  • Sub-Genre: Literary Criticism
  • Imprint: Fordham University Press
  • Publisher: Fordham University Press
A Taytsh Manifesto

A Taytsh Manifesto

Collapsible content

DESCRIPTION

Yiddish, Translation, and the Making of Modern Jewish Culture
A Taytsh Manifesto calls for a translational paradigm for Yiddish studies, and for the study of modern Jewish culture, that identifies—in Yiddish and beyond—how cultures intertwine, how they become implicated in world systems and empire, and how they might escape such limiting and oppressive structures.

A Taytsh Manifesto calls for a translational paradigm for Yiddish studies and for the study of modern Jewish culture. Saul Noam Zaritt calls for a shift in vocabulary, from Yiddish to taytsh, in order to promote reading strategies that account for the ways texts named as Jewish move between languages and cultures.
Yiddish, a moniker that became dominant only in the early twentieth century, means "Jewish" and thus marks the language with a single identity: of and for a Jewish collective. In contrast, this book calls attention to an earlier and, at one time, more common name for the language: taytsh, which initially means "German." By using the term taytsh, speakers indicated that they were indeed speaking a Germanic language, a language that was not entirely their own. In time, when the word shifted to a verb, taytshn, it came to mean the act of translation. To write or speak in Yiddish is thus to render into taytsh and inhabit the gap between languages.
A Taytsh Manifesto highlights the cultural porousness that inheres in taytsh and deploys the term as a paradigm that can be applied to a host of modern Jewish cultural formations. The book reads three corpora in modern Yiddish culture through the lens of translation: Yiddish pulp fiction, also known as shund (trash); the genre of the Yiddish monologue as authored by Sholem Aleichem and other prominent Yiddish writers; and the persistence of Yiddish as a language of vulgarity in contemporary U.S. culture. Together these examples help revise current histories of Yiddish while demonstrating the need for new vocabularies to account for the multidirectionality of Jewish culture. A Taytsh Manifesto develops a model for identifying, in Yiddish and beyond, how cultures intertwine, how they become implicated in world systems and empire, and how they might escape such limiting and oppressive structures.



DELIVERY & RETURNS

UK Delivery:

  • Free delivery on all orders of £10 or more.
  • £1.49 delivery fee on orders below £10.
  • UK orders are shipped via Royal Mail 2nd Class.

International Delivery:

  • Flat rate delivery charges vary by country.

Dispatch and Delivery Times:

  • All orders are shipped from our warehouse in Northampton, UK within 48 hours of receipt during working hours.
  • UK mainland orders typically arrive within 3-5 working days via Royal Mail 2nd Class.
  • International estimated delivery times:
  • Europe & Channel Islands: 7 to 10 working days
  • USA: 7 to 15 working days
  • Rest of the World: 9 to 21 working days

View our full delivery infomation here.

  • OVER

    2 MILLION PRODUCTS

  • 60 MILLION CUSTOMERS

    ACROSS 190 COUNTRIES