USEM 01a: Jewish Literatures in Eastern Europe: Syllabus. Description of the Course. Prescribed Reading

Similar documents
Yiddish Literature and Culture in Europe Jewish Studies 269/ German 269/ Lit Trans 269 Course Overview: Learning Goals:

Yiddish Literature and Culture in Europe Jewish Studies 269/ German 269/ Lit Trans 269

Modern Jewish Literature Jewish Studies 318/ Lit Trans 318

Modern East European Jewish History,

HI History of the Jews in Russia and Eastern Europe Fall 2012 Tuesdays and Thursdays: 11:00-12:30

CET Syllabus of Record

HST405E/505E Colloquium on East European Jewish History: The Shtetl Prof. Natan Meir Fall 2012

Jewish History II: Jews in the Modern World

PURDUE UNIVERSITY School of Interdisciplinary Studies Jewish Studies

Tevye The Dairyman And The Railroad Stories (Library Of Yiddish Classics) By Hillel Halkin, Sholem Aleichem

Lit Trans 229: Representations of the Jews in Eastern European Cultures Topic: Writing the Jewish Body (Meets with GER 266 and JS 230)

History of the Jews in the Modern World HI 219 Fall 2013, MWF 1:00-2:00 CAS 229 Office hours: MW 10:30-12:00 and by appointment

The Jews in Poland and Russia, volume 1: The Jews in Poland and Russia, volume 2:

Professor: Elizabeth Shively. Course Description:

Introduction to Modern Jewish History. JEWISH STUDIES/HISTORY 220 MWF 11-11:50am Classroom: Education L185

Syllabus for BIB 332 Old Testament Historical Books 3.0 Credit Hours Spring 2016

GREAT JEWISH WRITERS (Ethnicity and Literary Texts)

Jewish Humor and History HST 495 Mon 6:30-9:15pm Morton 214 Instructor: Dr. Jarrod Tanny, Fall 2017

American Jewish Literature

Jewish Humor and History HIST 369W TTh 4:10-6pm Bentley 129 Instructor: Dr. Jarrod Tanny, Fall 2009

Olga Litvak. I. Education. II. Employment. III. Honors and fellowships

MN 382 PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICE OF PREACHING

Study Center in Prague, Czech Republic

Class Location: (050) s: (03)

REL 315 BASIC COURSE OUTLINE Unit 1: RELIGION AS STORY

Course Syllabus TRH2452H Modern Orthodox Theology (15th to 21st c) Trinity College Toronto School of Theology May - June (Summer) 2016

Syllabus for BIB 332 Old Testament Historical Books 3.0 Credit Hours Spring 2014

The Bilingual Works of Isaac Bashevis Singer: Novels, Translations, World Literature

Hebrew Studies 331: The Book of Genesis: Where It All Begins Professor David Brusin Office Hours by Appointment (414)

From Ibrahim ibn Yakub to 6 Anielewicz Street PROGRAM May 2015

Philosophical Witnessing

The Jews In Poland And Russia, Vol. 2: By Antony Polonsky READ ONLINE

Syllabus for GBIB 626 The Book of Acts 3 Credit Hours Spring 2015

Study Center in Prague, Czech Republic

HIST 4420/ : THE CRUSADES. Co-listed as Mid E 4542/ Fall 2016 MWF 10:45-11: BU C

Residential GBIB-512 Course Syllabus. Bethesda University of California

Framingham State University Syllabus PHIL 101-B Invitation to Philosophy Summer 2018

AS Themes and Concepts in Jewish History Wednesdays, Fridays 3:00-4:15

Anti-Semitism and History HST Mon 6:30-9:15pm Morton 212 Instructor: Dr. Jarrod Tanny, Spring 2012

Course Submission Form

THIS IS A TENTATIVE SYLLABUS. CHANGES MAY BE MADE

Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary NT502 Interpreting the New Testament Professor: Elizabeth Shively

General Education Course Information Sheet Please submit this sheet for each proposed course

AMERICAN JEWISH HISTORY 563:345; 512:345 Tuesday/Thursday 1:10-2:30PM Hardenburg B5 Spring 2013

THE ZOHAR: PRITZKER EDITION Translation and Commentary by Daniel C. Matt TO BE PUBLISHED IN 12 VOLUMES

IS104 Medieval Literature and Culture Forms of Love

Torah & Histories (BibSt-Fdn 3) Part 1 of a 2-part survey of the Hebrew Bible or Christian Old Testament Maine School of Ministry ~ Fall 2017

Recommended Michael Meyer, The Origins of the Modern Jew. David Vital, A People Apart: The Jews of Europe,

Document B: Magna Carta, Excerpt of Primary Source

Texts Bill T. Arnold Genesis, The New Cambridge Bible Commentary (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009).

Hebrew undergraduate course handbook 2017

Syllabus for BIB 332 Old Testament Historical Books 3.0 Credit Hours Spring 2007

Azusa Pacific University Division of Religion and Philosophy Course Instruction Plan Prepared by: Matthew R.

Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary NT502 Interpreting the New Testament Professor: Elizabeth Shively

NOTE: A $370 fee will be charged at registration to pay for the assessment to be done by the Midwest Ministry Development Service.

Syllabus for BIB 332 Old Testament Historical Books 3.0 Credit Hours Spring 2013

ADVANCED EXPOSITORY PREACHING COHORT SYLLABUS (v ) Residence One

JEWISH STUDIES (JWST)

Sec1 or Sec2 THEO 279 ROMAN CATHOLICISM:

Messiah College HIS 399: Topics: Religion and the American Founding Spring 2009 MWF 1:50-2:50 Boyer 422

Syllabus for BIB Pentateuch 3.0 Credit Hours Summer 2008 Directed Study

Phil 341: Kierkegaard and Nietzsche. CSUN Spring, 2016 Prof. Robin M. Muller. Office: Sierra Tower 506

Syllabus Yiddish 03000

Syllabus for BIB 437 Psalms and Wisdom Literature 3.0 Credit Hours Spring 2016

Instructor: Fred K. Drogula, Ascension 323 (PBX 5436), home: Office Hours: T TH 11:30-1:30pm, W 2:30-4:00pm, and by appointment

Backgrounds of Modern Literature English 344L Class Unique Number: Spring 2010 PAR 206 Tuesdays and Thursdays, 5:00-6:30pm

OT SCRIPTURE I Louisville Presbyterian Theological Seminary Fall 2012 Wednesdays & Fridays 9:30-11:20am Schlegel Hall 122

YIDDISH LITERATURE: A PATH TO ETHNIC AWARENESS

Union University Ed.D. in Educational Leadership-Higher Education Course Syllabus

Department of Jewish Studies

Israeli Fiction in Translation Jewish Studies 367/ Lit Trans 367 University of Wisconsin- Madison Fall 2016 Lecture: TuTh 11:00-12:15, Ingraham 120

THE ZIONIST IDEA. A Historical Analysis and Reader. by Arthur Hertzberg EDITED AND WITH AN INTRODUCTION, AN AFTERWORD AND BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES

GSTR 310 Understandings of Christianity: The Global Face of Christianity Fall 2010

COURSE SYLLABUS. OBJECTIVE: By noting the distinctive eras of Hebrew history and the featured characteristics of each era.

OT Exegesis of Isaiah Louisville Presbyterian Theological Seminary Spring Term 2013 Wed and Fri 10:00am-11:20am

NOTE: A $370 fee will be charged at registration to pay for the assessment to be done by the Midwest Ministry Development Service.

Office Hours: Monday and Friday, 3-4 pm., and by appointment

Zionism and Peace in Israeli Cinema Instructor: Rami Kimchi

Further your understanding of how Christian writers and leaders have interpreted human experience and human destiny.

The Jews In Poland And Russia, Vol. 2: By Antony Polonsky

ENGL : Contemporary Jewish-American Fiction The current generation of Jewish authors in America

Enlightenment and Revolution in the Atlantic World

Course of Study Summer 2015 Book List and Pre-Work

Azusa Pacific University Department of Religion and Philosophy Syllabus THEO 303 (04) Theology and the Christian Life 3 Units Fall 2007

LIT/HBR/JST4930: Holocaust Novel. The course is Cross-Listed with the UF Center for Jewish Studies and is Part of the UF Holocaust Certificate.

Employment of the Coordinator, DRE or Youth Minister

(add 'PHIL 3400' to subject line) Course Webpages: Moodle login page

(P420-1) Practical Reason in Ancient Greek and Contemporary Philosophy. Spring 2018

A. General competencies to be achieved. The student will be able to...

University of Toronto. Department of Political Science Department for the Study of Religion JPR 419 SECULARISM AND RELIGION SYLLABUS 2016

COURSE SYLLABUS PW612-DA-h-D Advanced Preaching. UNITED THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY Summer, 2015

Allison Schachter Curriculum Vitae May 15, 2012

HCOL 185D Cultural Crisis in Fin-de-Siècle Europe

COURSE SYLLABUS SOUTHEAST INSTITUTE of BIBLICAL STUDIES

Anthropology R5B Reading and Composition in Anthropology Fall Office Hours: Thursday 3-5pm

HB6/710 (3) Timeless Inquiries: Biblical Wisdom Literature and Contemporary Values Fall 2016

HI 307: The Roman World

THE PAPERS OF ROBERTA KALECHOFSKY. Accession #

Northern Seminary NT 301 Jesus and the Gospels Summer 2018

REL201 A: Jesus of Nazareth

Transcription:

- 1 - Antony Polonsky Spring 2007 Lown 308 USEM 01a: Jewish Literatures in Eastern Europe: Syllabus Description of the Course The emergence of a modern literary consciousness among the Jews was one of the results of the breakup of traditional Jewish society and the attempt to transform the Jews from a religious and cultural community transcending national boundaries into citizens of the different countries in which they lived. In Eastern Europe, where the majority of European Jews lived, this new literary consciousness was expressed in various languages including Hebrew, Yiddish, Polish and Russian. This course will study of the development of modern literary forms, both prose and poetry, among the Jews of Eastern Europe. The works will be studied in English translation. Prescribed Reading Sholem Aleichem Isaac Leib Peretz Tevye the Dairyman in Tevye the Dairyman and The Railroad Stories, translated with an introduction by Hillel Halkin, Shocken Books, New York, 1996. ISBN 0-8052-1069-5 Selected stories from The I.L. Peretz Reader, edited with and introduction by Ruth R. Wisse, Schocken Books, New York, 1996. ISBN 0-8052-1001-6 Selected poems by Yehuda Leib Gordon, Khaym Nakhman Bialik and Shaul Tchernichowsky (will be supplied by the instructor) Devora Baron Shai Ansky The First Day and Other Stories, translated and edited by Naomi Seidman and Chana Kronfeld, University of California Press, Berkeley, Los Angeles, London, 2001. IBSN 0-520-08538-8 The Dybbuk in The Dybbuk and Other Stories, edited by David Roskies, Schocken Books, New York, 1992. ISBN 0-8052-4111-6 Selected Russian and Yiddish poetry from the Soviet Union (will be supplied by the instructor) Isaac Babel Tales of Odessa and Stories from The Collected Stories, edited and translated by Walter Morison, with an introduction by Lionel Trilling, Meridian 1

- 2 - Books, 1974, no ISBN, Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 60-6743 Bruno Schulz The Street of Crocodiles, translated by Celina Wieniewska, introduction by Jerzy Ficowski, Penguin Books, 1977, ISBN 0-14-00.4227 X Selected poems by Julian Tuwim (will be supplied by the instructor) Henryk Grynberg The Victory, translated by Richard Lourie, Northwestern University Press, Evanston, IL, 1993. ANSI Z39.48-1984 Contemporary Jewish Writing in Poland: An Anthology, edited by Antony Polonsky and Monika Adamczyk-Garbowska, University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln and London, 2001. ISBN 0-8032- 3721-9 Selected poems dealing with the Holocaust (will be supplied by the instructor) Week One 17 January Course Outline Introduction: The transformation of the Jews under the influence of modernity Week Two 22, 24 January The emergence of modern Yiddish literature Sholem Aleichem Tevye the Dairyman in Tevye the Dairyman and The Railroad Stories, translated with an introduction by Hillel Halkin. Week Three 29, 31 January The emergence of modern Hebrew literature 2

- 3 - Selected poems by Yehuda Leib Gordon, Khaym Nakhman Bialik and Shaul Tchernichowsky (will be supplied by the instructor) First USEM paper, 3-5 pages, due: How did the new literature in Hebrew and Yiddish differ from that of the Haskalah (Jewish Enlightenment)? Week Four 5, 7 February Women in Jewish Eastern Europe Devora Baron The First Day and Other Stories, translated and edited by Naomi Seidman and Chana Kronfeld, Week Five 12, 14 February Jewish writing in Russian and Polish down to 1914 Isaac Leib Peretz Selected stories from The I.L. Peretz Reader, edited with and introduction by Ruth R. Wisse. Week Six 26, 28 February The new Yiddish literature down to 1914 Shai Ansky The Dybbuk in The Dybbuk and Other Stories, edited by David Roskies. Weeks Seven/Eight 5, 7, 12, 14 March Jewish writing in the Soviet Union 1921-1941 Isaac Babel The Collected Stories, edited and translated by Walter Morison, with an introduction by Lionel Trilling. Selected Russian and Yiddish poetry from the Soviet Union 3

- 4 - Weeks Nine/Ten 19, 21, 26, 28 March Jewish writing in interwar Poland Bruno Schulz The Street of Crocodiles, translated by Celina Wieniewska, introduction by Jerzy Ficowski, Penguin Books, 1977. Selected poems by Julian Tuwim Second USEM paper, 3-5 pages, due Weeks Eleven/Twelve/Thirteen 11, 16, 18, 23, 25, 30 April The Holocaust and its aftermath in the Soviet Union and Poland Adolf Rudnicki Bohdan Wojdowski Henryk Grynberg Henryk Grynberg Hanna Krall Ascension, in Contemporary Jewish Writing in Poland: An Anthology, edited by Antony Polonsky and Monika Adamczyk-Garbowska. Extract from Bread for the Departed form Contemporary Jewish Writing in Poland: An Anthology. The Victory, translated by Richard Lourie. Poems in Contemporary Jewish Writing in Poland: An Anthology. Briefly Now, The Dybbuk and The Armchair in Contemporary Jewish Writing in Poland: An Anthology. Selected poems dealing with the Holocaust Deadline for completed research paper draft Final Take-Home Examination: one essay question on research paper, plus 4

- 5 - revision of, or commentary on, first USEM paper In-class Notes USEM Guidelines and Requirements This USEM course is designed to help prepare you for your future reading and writing. It is therefore vital that you regard the work you do for it as done not only for its own sake, but also as a basis for the type of work you will be undertaking in the remainder of your undergraduate career. Be practical in your in your note-taking; while you may want to jot down information that helps focus your attention in class or that you may want to use in a future paper, you may benefit most by only recording in your notebook material that you will need to use later. Your notebook should be a record of what you have learned, especially of what you have learned about how to read and write. It may be that your most helpful notes will not be ready-made answers but questions you have still to answer. In-class Performance This class is conducted as a seminar and its goal is to achieve a shared learning experience. Your primary obligation is thus social - your first priority should be those types of work which contribute both to your learning and that of the others in the class (class reading, the preparation of written material to be considered in the class and so on). The principal basis for evaluation in this course is your written work, but class participation can significantly affect a borderline grade. This may take various forms - inclass discussion, peer review of papers and perhaps smaller discussion groups. Class attendance is vital and you should not miss class except as a consequence of a personal or medical emergency or a scheduling conflict which you have discussed with me in advance. Unexcused absence from the class will affect your final grade. Evaluation In order to obtain a passing grade, your work on each assignment must be awarded a passing grade and you must show that you have completed the overwhelming majority of the asssigned readings. You may revise a paper right up to the granting of the final grade, but only a significant improvement in the work will lead to a grade being altered. Your final grade will reflect your fullest achievement in the course: you can efface the effect of early poor grades if your later work shows real improvement. Grading is the most difficult aspect of my work - I am happy to discuss with you your grades, but you should understand that in the final analysis the awarding of a grade has to be the result of judgement, which is always partially subjective. Communication Please do not hestitate to let me know about any difficulties you are having with the course or any suggestions you may have for improving it. You can communicate with me in class, by telephone or by e-mail 5

- 6 - If you are a student with a documented disability at Brandeis University and with to have a reasonable accomodation made for you in this class, please see the course instructor immediately. 6