A Marriage Made in Heaven: The Sexual Politics of Hebrew and Yiddish

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University of California Press, Jan 1, 1997 - Foreign Language Study - 160 pages
A Marriage Made in Heaven is a history of how Hebrew and Yiddish came to represent the masculine and feminine faces, respectively, of Ashkenazic Jewish culture. It is the first book-length exploration of the historical associations between Yiddish and Jewish women and Hebrew and Jewish men, tracing these associations back to the seventeenth century and the sexual segregation of reading audiences. Documenting the eventual rise of Yiddish "women's" literature, Seidman also examines this sexual-linguistic system as it shaped the work of two bilingual authors: Sh. Y. Abramovitsh, the "grandfather" of modern Hebrew and Yiddish literature, and Dvora Baron, the first woman prose writer in modern Hebrew. She then analyzes the roles Yiddish "femininity" and Hebrew "masculinity" played in the Hebrew-Yiddish language wars, the divorce that ultimately ended the Hebrew-Yiddish "marriage."
 

Contents

A READING
40
AN EPISTEMOLOGY
67
THE SEXUAL POLITICS
102
IN CONCLUSION
132
Index
155
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About the author (1997)

Naomi Seidman is Assistant Professor of Jewish Culture at the Center for Jewish Studies, Graduate Theological Union, Berkeley, and coeditor and translator of Conversations with Dvora: An Experimental Biography of the First Modern Hebrew Woman Writer (California, 1997, see p. 30). She is now translating a collection of short stories by Dvora Baron.

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