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The Early Writings of Isaac Bashevis Singer

Class starts Jan 3 10:00am-12:30pm

3 sessions, Wednesdays
January 3, 10, 17

Instructor: Jan Schwarz

Tuition: $250
YIVO members: $175**
Capped at 20 students.

Registration is closed.


Most people know I.B. Singer as a Jewish American storyteller and fabulist but his early writings reveal an edgier, darker side of his Yiddish work. Through readings of Singer’s early writings published before he arrived in New York in May 1935, the course will offer new perspectives on a major 20th century Jewish writer.

The first decade of Singer’s literary career in Warsaw is virtually unknown except for the acclaimed historical novel Satan in Goray (1935) about the messianic Sabbatai Zevi movement in the aftermath of mid 17th century Chielmnicky pogroms. In addition to this novel, we will be reading stories, essays, memoirs and sketches which Singer published in the Yiddish press between 1925-1935. Singer’s first steps as a Yiddish writer will be situated in the literary and cultural-political context of realism, modernism, and the popular literature (shund) which characterized interwar Yiddish literature in the three main centers Warsaw, New York and Moscow. All the primary and secondary texts will be available in English and Yiddish.


Jan Schwarz is Associate Professor of Yiddish Studies at Lund University, Sweden. He is the author of two books on Yiddish culture and literature: Imagining Lives: Autobiographical Fiction of Yiddish Writers (2005) and Survivors and Exiles: Yiddish Culture after the Holocaust (2015); his translation work includes translations (into Danish) of Scholem-Aleichem’s Tevye the Dairyman (2009) and Abraham Sutzkever’s Green Aquarium: Stories from the Jerusalem of Lithuania (2017). He is currently at work on The Bilingual Works of Isaac Bashevis Singer: Novels, Translations, World Literature, funded by the Swedish Research Council.


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