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Zhargon poster featuring Yiddish text and a figure clutching their face
This program is not available. Please contact us for more information.

Zhargon: Histories of Yiddishkayt

Explore the rich and fascinating history, art and culture of Jews in Eastern Europe


Program Description

What was Jewish life like in Eastern Europe? How did the political and economic upheavals of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries change Eastern European culture, and how do these changes still inform historical and cultural memory today? How did the changes in traditional Jewish life relate to gender and the place of women in society (and importantly, how do we queer these historical narratives)? Who were the Bund, and what was their relation to socialist movements of the time? What is a Shtetl, and how was it distinct from other types of communal settlement in Europe? In this course, we will explore these (and other) questions, focusing on the social, cultural and political changes that shaped the lives and cultures of Jews in Eastern Europe. Drawing on a wealth of literary, musical, and visual materials, as well as archival and historical documentation, we will encounter poets, radicals, artists, musicians and revolutionaries who lived, created and dreamed in Yiddish, and learn how they thought about their world and sought to change it for the better! ***Schedule & Fees*** This course includes 6 in-person classes from Oct. 22 to Nov. 26 (Tuesdays from 7-9pm) PLUS full access to the Zhargon lecture series (4 online talks by leading scholars in Yiddish Studies, dates and times TBA). The standard fee is $300, with reduced rate options available to address financial access barriers. ***Instructor Bios*** Jess Goldman (they/them) is a writer, comics artist, and amateur puppeteer based on the traditional, unceded lands of the Squamish, Tsleil-Waututh, and Musqueam peoples. Their writing has been published in Maisonneuve, the CBC, and Room Magazine. A graduate of University of British Columbia’s MFA in Creative Writing Program, their writing explores that sweet spot where Yiddishkayt and queer culture joyfully collide. Itamar Manoff (He/Him) is the co-executive director of the Peretz Centre. A PhD Candidate in the Department of Educational Studies at the University of British Columbia, Itamar is a community educator, language teacher and learner, and Jewish history enthusiast. He is a graduate of the Wallis Annenberg Helix-Yiddishkayt Fellowship (2018-2019), and has studied Yiddish at an advanced level at YIVO Institute for Jewish Research in New York. Itamar is also the co-founder of This is Not an Ulpan, a grassroots, cooperative language school dedicated to the principles of critical pedagogy and emancipatory education in Palestine and Israel.

EndedPeretz Centre, 6184 Ash St., Vancouver

7 spots left


Contact Details

  • Peretz Centre, 6184 Ash St., Vancouver

    6184 Ash Street, Vancouver, BC, Canada

    dbecker@peretz-centre.org

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