Ruth Wisse undertook the study
of literature because it seemed to offer more information
and experience than any other branch of knowledge. She moved
from English into Yiddish and Comparative Literature for similar
reasons. Yiddish might appear to be a minor literature, written
as it is in the vernacular of a small people, the Jews, in
only one of their several languages, and only since about
the sixteenth century. Yet because Yiddish literature registers
the personal and collective experience of much of European
Jewry and their American descendants, and given that European
Jews have been all too much at the center of modern history,
Yiddish literature turns out to be exceptionally revealing,
dramatic, original, important.
Its study has led Professor Wisse from an
initial interest in The Shlemiel as Modern Hero to a revised
investigation of "the liberal betrayal of the Jews,"
which is the subtitle of her latest book If I Am Not for
Myself. In between she wrote A Little Love in Big Manhattan
about two Yiddish poets in America, a study of I.L. Peretz,
and edited a number of anthologies of Yiddish prose and poetry
in translation.
Other books by Ruth Wisse:
The I.L. Peretz Reader
A Little Love in Big Manhattan
The Best of Sholom Aleichem
A Shtetl, and Other Yiddish Novellas
The Penguin Book of Modern Yiddish Verse
The Modern Jewish Canon:A Journey through Language and
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