Results 131 to 140 of about 329 (175)
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From Yiddish to "Yiddishkeit": A.M. Klein, J.I. Segal and Montreal’s Yiddish Culture

Journal of Canadian Studies, 1984
While the religious sources of A.M. Klein’s work have been acknowledged, his debt to Yiddish and its literature — from which he derived nourishment and inspiration all his life — has been ignored. Klein matured in a Jewish Montreal which was largely Yiddish-speaking and he knew well its prominent Yiddish writers and communal leaders, especially the ...
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An important event in Soviet Yiddish cultural life: The new Russian‐Yiddish dictionary

Soviet Jewish Affairs, 1984
M. A. Shapiro, I. G. Spivak and M. Ya. Shulman (eds.). Russko‐evreysky (idish) slovar. Rusish‐Yidisher Verterbukh (Russian‐Yiddish Dictionary). Moscow: Russky yazyk, 1984. 720 pp. Approx. 40,000 words. 20,000 copies. 8.80 roubles.
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Survivors and exiles: Yiddish culture after the Holocaust

East European Jewish Affairs, 2016
Jan Schwarz frames his moving new study in terms of its contribution to Yiddish studies and Holocaust studies, yet the questions he raises are pertinent even more broadly for Jews after World War I...
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Two Studies in Yiddish Culture

Books Abroad, 1969
Eisig Silberschlag   +1 more
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