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Max Weinreich on Ashkenazic Jewry, 1000-1300 (1967)

8/27/2015

A paper by Max Weinreich on Ashkanaz, 1100-1300

Archaeological discoveries at the site of Vilna's Groyse shul (Great Synagogue)

8/25/2015

Archaeologists probe the site of Vilna’s Great Synagogue.

Theo Bikel's Final Farewell

7/24/2015

Theodore Bikel (1924 - 2015) sings "Di zun vet aruntergeyn" at the YIVO 13th Annual Heritage Luncheon in his honor on June 18, 2015.

Vera Stern (1927 - 2015)

7/23/2015

With deepest sympathies, the YIVO Institute for Jewish Research announces the passing of Vera Stern (July 11, 1927 - July 21, 2015), widow of Isaac Stern. Beloved mother and grandmother, Mrs. Stern was also a friend and longtime supporter of YIVO. We send our sincerest condolences to her family. To ...

Theodore Bikel (1924 - 2015)

7/22/2015

It is with sadness that the YIVO Institute for Jewish Research mourns the passing of Theodore Bikel (1924-2015). Mr. Bikel was a true renassaince man of the 20th century with prolific achievements in theatre, film and music, as well as a humanitarian who fought for civil and workers' rights. He ...

Jam-packed June at YIVO: Radical Yiddish puppet theater; Theodore Bikel, Yiddish & Ukrainian music, and the opening of a new exhibition

7/2/2015

The week of June 15, 2015 set the heads of Yiddish and Jewish culture aficionados in New York City spinning: Kulturfest, a week-long celebration of Jewish performing arts, offered an almost overwhelming array of concerts, theatrical performances, and lectures across the city, with sometimes more than one event taking place simultaneously.

YIVO’s contribution to Kulturfest was the world premiere of the Modicut Project, a reinterpretation of the first Yiddish language puppet theater in the U.S., which flourished in the 1920s-1930s in New York City. An artist-scholar collaboration between Great Small Works and Rutgers Professor Edward Portnoy, the new, original play brings together the sensibilities of 1920s avant garde puppet theater, socialism, political activism, Yiddish, ethnographic fieldwork, and identity politics with the stagecraft of Great Small Works.

Great Small Works performing "Muntergang and Other Cheerful Downfalls" as part of the Modicut Project on June 16. Photo by Erik McGregor.

Janet Hadda (1945 – 2015)

7/2/2015

Janet Hadda, Yiddish professor, psychoanalyst, and biographer of Isaac Bashevis Singer and Allen Ginsberg, died in California on June 23, 2015 at the age of 69. Professor Hadda, who studied and worked at YIVO in the 1960s-70s, was one of the first tenured professors of Yiddish in the United States. Her work is best known for bringing the techniques and insights of psychoanalysis to the study of Yiddish literature.

Read her obituary and a more personal tribute by David Roskies in the Forward.

Di gantse velt af a firmeblank: The World of Jewish Letterheads

7/2/2015

Assemble the letterheads of Jewish organizations, institutions, and individuals in Europe, North and South America, and Palestine from the 1890s to the eve of World War II in 1939 and you have a portrait of the Jewish world: transnational; diverse in language, political, and religious orientation; and flourishing.

Di gantse velt af a firmeblank (The Whole World on a Letterhead) is an experiment in building that portrait. Here, we hope to bring you several times a month, a different example of letterhead from a single collection in the YIVO Archives, the Papers of Kalman Marmor.

Arieh Tartakower on the Differences Between Hebrew and Yiddish Culture (1967)

7/2/2015

In this episode from January 8, 1967, Dr. Arieh Tartakower, sociologist and chairman of the Israeli Division of the World Jewish Congress and president of the World Hebrew Confederation delivers a speech on the differences between Hebrew and Yiddish culture, during a visit to YIVO on December 27, 1966: "We are ...

Survivors and Exiles: Interview with Jan Schwarz

6/19/2015

Author Jan Schwarz talks about his book.