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Songs in Dark Times: Yiddish Poetry of Struggle from Scottsboro to Palestine

Current price: $42.00
Songs in Dark Times: Yiddish Poetry of Struggle from Scottsboro to Palestine
Songs in Dark Times: Yiddish Poetry of Struggle from Scottsboro to Palestine

Barnes and Noble

Songs in Dark Times: Yiddish Poetry of Struggle from Scottsboro to Palestine

Current price: $42.00

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A probing reading of leftist Jewish poets who, during the interwar period, drew on the trauma of pogroms to depict the suffering of other marginalized peoples.
Between the world wars, a generation of Jewish leftist poets reached out to other embattled peoples of the earth—Palestinian Arabs, African Americans, Spanish Republicans—in Yiddish verse.
Songs in Dark Times
examines the richly layered meanings of this project, grounded in Jewish collective trauma but embracing a global community of the oppressed.
The long 1930s, Amelia M. Glaser proposes, gave rise to a genre of internationalist modernism in which tropes of national collective memory were rewritten as the shared experiences of many national groups. The utopian Jews of
effectively globalized the pogroms in a bold and sometimes fraught literary move that asserted continuity with anti-Arab violence and black lynching. As communists and fellow travelers, the writers also sought to integrate particular experiences of suffering into a borderless narrative of class struggle. Glaser resurrects their poems from the pages of forgotten Yiddish communist periodicals, particularly the New York–based
Morgn Frayhayt
(
Morning Freedom
) and the Soviet literary journal
Royte Velt
Red World
). Alongside compelling analysis, Glaser includes her own translations of ten poems previously unavailable in English, including Malka Lee’s “God’s Black Lamb,” Moyshe Nadir’s “Closer,” and Esther Shumiatsher’s “At the Border of China.”
These poets dreamed of a moment when “we” could mean “we workers” rather than “we Jews.”
takes on the beauty and difficulty of that dream, in the minds of Yiddish writers who sought to heal the world by translating pain.

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