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Jewish literature

Jewish literature includes works written by Jews on Jewish themes, literary works written in Jewish languages on various themes, and literary works in any language written by Jewish writers.[1] Ancient Jewish literature includes Biblical literature and rabbinic literature. Medieval Jewish literature includes not only rabbinic literature but also ethical literature, philosophical literature, mystical literature, various other forms of prose including history and fiction, and various forms of poetry of both religious and secular varieties.[1] The production of Jewish literature has flowered with the modern emergence of secular Jewish culture. Modern Jewish literature has included Yiddish literature, Judeo-Tat literature, Ladino literature, Hebrew literature (especially Israeli literature), and Jewish American literature.

Medieval Jewish literature

Fiction

Prominent examples of medieval Jewish fiction included:

  • Sefer ha-Ma'asiyyot, by Nissim b. Jacob b. Nissim ibn Shahin of Kairouan, written in Arabic, a book of fables based on aggadic legends.
  • Sefer Sha'ashu'im, by Joseph Ibn Zabara (12th century), a story combining folktales, epigrams, and passages of philosophy and science.
  • Ben ha-Melekh ve-ha-Nazir, by Abraham b. Samuel ha-Levi Ibn Ḥasdai, based on an Indian tale based on the life of Buddha.
  • Meshal ha-Kadmoni, by Isaac ibn Sahula (13th century), combining aggadah with original stories
  • Mishlei Shu'alim ("Fox Fables"), by Berechiah ben Natronai ha-Nakdan, Hebrew fables which resemble Aesop's fables.

Poetry

Liturgical Jewish poetry (Piyyut) flourished in the Byzantine Palestine in the seventh and eighth centuries with the writings of Yose ben Yose, Yanai, and Eleazar Kalir.[1]

Later Spanish, Provençal, and Italian poets wrote both religious and secular poems. Particularly prominent poets were Solomon ibn Gabirol and Yehuda Halevi.

Little writing by Jewish women survives from this period. One Arabic stanza is attributed to the seventh-century Sarah of Yemen, who may have been Jewish; one stanza in Hebrew by the wife of Dunash ben Labrat survives from the tenth century; and three poems in Arabic attributed to the Andalusian woman Qasmuna survive from the twelfth.[2][3] The first female Jewish poet to write poetry in German was Rachel Akerman (1522–1544), who wrote a poem titled "Geheimniss des Hofes" (The Mystery of the Courts), in which she described the intrigues of courtiers.[4] A female Jewish poet writing in Yiddish during the same period was Rebecca bat Meir Tiktiner, author of a poem about Simchat Torah in forty couplets.[5]

Most medieval Hebrew poetry was mono-rhymed with quantitative metre influenced by the style of Jewish poets from fallen Al-Andalus. One noted exception are two passages from Sefer Hakhmoni by Shabbethai Donnolo (sometimes classified as rhymed prose "saj" according to the prosodic classifications borrowed from Arabic tradition) because they are not quantitatively metered.[6]

Other medieval Jewish literature

Medieval Jewish literature also includes:

Modern Jewish literature

Modern Jews continued to write standard forms of rabbinic literature: Jewish philosophical literature, mystical (Kabbalistic) literature, musar (ethical) literature, halakhic literature, and commentaries on the Bible about the king himself.

The modern era also saw the creation of what is generally known as "modern Jewish literature," discussed here. Modern Jewish literature emerged with the Hebrew literature of the Haskalah and broke with religious traditions about literature. Therefore, it can be distinguished from rabbinic literature which is distinctly religious in character.[7] Modern Jewish literature was a unique Jewish literature which often also contributed to the national literatures of many of the countries in which Jews lived.

Eighteenth-century Hebrew literature

It was with Moses Hayyim Luzzatto (1707–1746) that Hebrew poetry shook off the medieval fetters which hindered its free development. His allegorical drama "La-Yesharim Tehillah" (1743), which may be regarded as the first product of modern Hebrew literature, has been described as "a poem that in its classic perfection of style is second only to the Bible."[8] In Amsterdam, Luzzatto's pupil, David Franco Mendes (1713–92), in his imitations of Jean Racine ("Gemul 'Atalyah") and of Metastasio ("Yehudit"), continued his master's work, though his works are not as respected as were Luzzatto's. In Germany, the leader of the Haskalah movement Naphtali Hartwig Wessely (1725–1805) has been regarded as the "poet laureate" of his era.[8] Luzzatto and Wessely also wrote works of ethical musar literature, and Luzzatto's Mesillat Yesharim gained particular prominence.

Nineteenth-century Hebrew literature

(See also: Revival of the Hebrew language)
In Galicia, important literary artists included: Nachman Krochmal (1785–1840); Solomon Judah Loeb Rapoport (1790–1867); and the satirical poet and essayist Isaac Erter (1792–1841); and lyric poet and translator Meir Halevi Letteris (1815–1874). Writers in Amsterdam included the poet Samuel Molder (1789–1862). Writers in Prague included the haskalah leader Jehudah Loeb Jeiteles (1773–1838), author of witty epigrams ("Bene ha-Ne'urim") and of works directed against Hasidism and against superstition. Writers in Hungary included: the poet Solomon Lewison of Moor (1789–1822), author of "Melitzat Yeshurun"; the poet Gabriel Südfeld, father of Max Nordau; and the poet Simon Bacher. Romanian writers of note included Julius Barasch.[9] Italian Jewish writers included: I. S. Reggio (1784–1854); Joseph Almanzi; Hayyim Salomon; Samuel Vita Lolli (1788–1843); Rachel Morpurgo (1790–1860), whose poems evince religious piety and a mystic faith in Israel's future; and Samuel David Luzzatto (1800–65), who has been described as the first modern writer to introduce religious romanticism into Hebrew.[9]

Hebrew writers in the Russian empire included: the poet Jacob Eichenbaum; the Haskalah leader Isaac Baer Levinsohn; Kalman Schulman (1826–1900), who introduced the romantic form into Hebrew; the romantic poet Micah Joseph Lebensohn (1828–52); the "father of prose," Lithuanian author M. A. Ginzburg; and "the father of poetry," Lithuanian poet Abraham Baer Lebensohn, whose poems "Shire Sefat Kodesh" were extraordinarily successful. The creator of the Hebrew novel was Abraham Mapu (1808–67), whose historical romance "Ahabat Tziyyon" exercised an important influence on the development of Hebrew. The poet Judah Leib (Leon) Gordon was a satirist who has been characterized as "an implacable enemy of the Rabbis."[9]

Early 20th century Hebrew literature

Hayim Nahman Bialik (1873–1934) was one of the pioneers of modern Hebrew poetry and came to be recognized as Israel's national poet. Bialik contributed significantly to the revival of the Hebrew language. His influence is felt deeply in all subsequent Hebrew literature. Another prominent Hebrew poet of Bialik's era was Shaul Tchernichovsky (1875–1943), who is especially well known for his nature poetry and for his interest in the culture of ancient Greece.

Israeli literature

Among Israeli writers, Shmuel Yosef Agnon won the Nobel Prize for Literature for novels and short stories that employ a unique blend of biblical, Talmudic and modern Hebrew. Other Israeli authors whose works have been translated into other languages and who have attained international recognition include Ephraim Kishon, Yaakov Shabtai, A. B. Yehoshua, Amos Oz, Irit Linur, Etgar Keret and Yehoshua Sobol.

Yiddish literature

Modern Yiddish literature is generally dated to the publication in 1864 of Sholem Yankev Abramovitsh’s novel Dos kleyne mentshele (“The Little Person”). The most important of the early writers to follow Abramovitsh were Sholem Rabinovitsh, popularly known by his alter-ego, Sholem Aleichem, and I. L. Peretz. Later Yiddish writers of note include Abraham Sutzkever, Isaac Bashevis Singer, who won the Nobel Prize in 1978, and Chaim Grade.

American Jewish literature

American Jewish literature written in English includes the works of Gertrude Stein, Henry Roth, Saul Bellow, Norman Mailer, Bernard Malamud, Alicia Ostriker, Chaim Potok, and Philip Roth. The poetry of Allen Ginsberg often touches on Jewish themes (notably the early autobiographical works such as Howl and Kaddish). Recent Jewish-American literature includes the writings of Paul Auster, Michael Chabon, Joshua Cohen, Jonathan Safran Foer and Art Spiegelman.

German Jewish literature

Jewish authors who wrote in German and made outstanding contributions to world literature include the German poet Heinrich Heine and the Bohemian novelist Franz Kafka.

Other significant German-Jewish poets and essayists include Berthold Auerbach, Paul Celan, Else Lasker-Schüler, Ernst Lissauer, Jacob Raphael Fürstenthal, Siegfried Einstein, Karl Marx, Nelly Sachs, Karl Kraus, Egon Friedell, and Erich Mühsam.

German-Jewish novelists include Lion Feuchtwanger, Edgar Hilsenrath, Alfred Döblin, Arthur Schnitzler, Anna Seghers, Hermann Broch, Franz Werfel, Joseph Roth, Jakob Wassermann, and Stefan Zweig.

Russian-language Jewish literature

Isaak Babel (1894–1940) was a Soviet journalist, playwright, and short story writer acclaimed as "the greatest prose writer of Russian Jewry."[10] Other Russian writers of Jewish descent include Boris Pasternak (who never wrote on Jewish themes); Joseph Brodsky, a poet who won the Nobel Prize in 1987; Osip Mandelstam, another famous poet, wooer of Akhmatova, and victim of the Soviets. Vassily Grossman's experiences in WWII provide the main material for his novels.

Ladino Literature

The primary forms of modern Ladino literature have been fables and folktales.[11] Ladino fables and folktales often have Jewish themes, with biblical figures and legendary characters, and many of them feature the folk character "Ejoha" (also "Joha"). In 2001, the Jewish Publication Society published the first English translation of Ladino folk tales, collected by Matilda Koén-Sarano, Folktales of Joha, Jewish Trickster: The Misadventures of the Guileful Sephardic Prankster.

Modern Ladino poets include Margalit Matitiahu, Ilan Stavans, Avner Peretz, Victor Perera, Rita Gabbai Simantov, and Sara Benveniste Benrey.

Judeo-Tat literature

A connoisseur of the Judeo-Tat folklore, Hizgil Avshalumov created a folklore image of the witty (Juhuri: Шими Дербенди) - Shimi from Derbent.

A number of poets of the 20th century created their works in the Judeo-Tat language, such as Sergey Izgiyayev, creates (Juhuri: Иму гъэлхэнд шолуминим) - "We are the defenders of the World" (1952), (Juhuri: Фикиргьой шогьир) - "Thoughts of the Poet" (1966), (Juhuri: Муьгьбет ве гьисмет) - "The fate and love" (1972) and a number of other works. Shimshun Safonov, in 1968, created a collection of poetry (Juhuri: Парза, ма‘ни ма) - "Fly, my verse." Poetess Zoya Semenduyeva has released a collection (Juhuri: Войгей дуьл) - "The Command of the Heart". In 2007, her book was published (Juhuri: Духдер эн дуь бебе) - "Daughter of two fathers".

References

  1. ^ a b c "Literature, Jewish". Retrieved 13 July 2015.
  2. ^ Emily Taitz, Sondra Henry, and Cheryl Tallan, 'Sarah of Yemen', in The JPS Guide to Jewish Women: 600 B.C.E. to 1900 C.E. (Philadelphia: The Jewish Publication Society, 2003), pp. 57-59.
  3. ^ The Dream of the Poem: Hebrew Poetry from Muslim and Christian Spain, 950-1492, ed. and trans. by Peter Cole (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2007), pp. 27, 364.
  4. ^ "AKERMAN, RACHEL - JewishEncyclopedia.com". Retrieved 13 July 2015.
  5. ^ Israel Zinberg, Old Yiddish Literature from Its Origins to the Haskalah Period (KTAV, 1975), p. 51ff.
  6. ^ Kozody, Maud (2018). From Catalonia to the Caribbean: The Sephardic Orbit from Medieval to Modern Times. Brill. ISBN 9789004376700.
  7. ^ "LITERATURE, MODERN HEBREW - JewishEncyclopedia.com". Retrieved 13 July 2015.
  8. ^ a b "LITERATURE, MODERN HEBREW - JewishEncyclopedia.com". Retrieved 13 July 2015.
  9. ^ a b c "LITERATURE, MODERN HEBREW - JewishEncyclopedia.com". Retrieved 13 July 2015.
  10. ^ Neither and Both; anthology. Joshua Cohen. The Forward Arts & Culture; Pg. B2. July 6, 2007
  11. ^ "Ladino Literature". My Jewish Learning. Retrieved 13 July 2015.

jewish, literature, includes, works, written, jews, jewish, themes, literary, works, written, jewish, languages, various, themes, literary, works, language, written, jewish, writers, ancient, includes, biblical, literature, rabbinic, literature, medieval, incl. Jewish literature includes works written by Jews on Jewish themes literary works written in Jewish languages on various themes and literary works in any language written by Jewish writers 1 Ancient Jewish literature includes Biblical literature and rabbinic literature Medieval Jewish literature includes not only rabbinic literature but also ethical literature philosophical literature mystical literature various other forms of prose including history and fiction and various forms of poetry of both religious and secular varieties 1 The production of Jewish literature has flowered with the modern emergence of secular Jewish culture Modern Jewish literature has included Yiddish literature Judeo Tat literature Ladino literature Hebrew literature especially Israeli literature and Jewish American literature Contents 1 Medieval Jewish literature 1 1 Fiction 1 2 Poetry 1 3 Other medieval Jewish literature 2 Modern Jewish literature 2 1 Eighteenth century Hebrew literature 2 2 Nineteenth century Hebrew literature 2 3 Early 20th century Hebrew literature 2 4 Israeli literature 2 5 Yiddish literature 2 6 American Jewish literature 2 7 German Jewish literature 2 8 Russian language Jewish literature 2 9 Ladino Literature 2 10 Judeo Tat literature 3 ReferencesMedieval Jewish literature EditFiction Edit Prominent examples of medieval Jewish fiction included Sefer ha Ma asiyyot by Nissim b Jacob b Nissim ibn Shahin of Kairouan written in Arabic a book of fables based on aggadic legends Sefer Sha ashu im by Joseph Ibn Zabara 12th century a story combining folktales epigrams and passages of philosophy and science Ben ha Melekh ve ha Nazir by Abraham b Samuel ha Levi Ibn Ḥasdai based on an Indian tale based on the life of Buddha Meshal ha Kadmoni by Isaac ibn Sahula 13th century combining aggadah with original stories Mishlei Shu alim Fox Fables by Berechiah ben Natronai ha Nakdan Hebrew fables which resemble Aesop s fables Poetry Edit Liturgical Jewish poetry Piyyut flourished in the Byzantine Palestine in the seventh and eighth centuries with the writings of Yose ben Yose Yanai and Eleazar Kalir 1 Later Spanish Provencal and Italian poets wrote both religious and secular poems Particularly prominent poets were Solomon ibn Gabirol and Yehuda Halevi Little writing by Jewish women survives from this period One Arabic stanza is attributed to the seventh century Sarah of Yemen who may have been Jewish one stanza in Hebrew by the wife of Dunash ben Labrat survives from the tenth century and three poems in Arabic attributed to the Andalusian woman Qasmuna survive from the twelfth 2 3 The first female Jewish poet to write poetry in German was Rachel Akerman 1522 1544 who wrote a poem titled Geheimniss des Hofes The Mystery of the Courts in which she described the intrigues of courtiers 4 A female Jewish poet writing in Yiddish during the same period was Rebecca bat Meir Tiktiner author of a poem about Simchat Torah in forty couplets 5 Most medieval Hebrew poetry was mono rhymed with quantitative metre influenced by the style of Jewish poets from fallen Al Andalus One noted exception are two passages from Sefer Hakhmoni by Shabbethai Donnolo sometimes classified as rhymed prose saj according to the prosodic classifications borrowed from Arabic tradition because they are not quantitatively metered 6 Other medieval Jewish literature Edit Medieval Jewish literature also includes Jewish philosophical literature mystical Kabbalistic literature musar literature ethical literature dealing with virtues and vices Halakhic literature Commentaries on the BibleModern Jewish literature EditModern Jews continued to write standard forms of rabbinic literature Jewish philosophical literature mystical Kabbalistic literature musar ethical literature halakhic literature and commentaries on the Bible about the king himself The modern era also saw the creation of what is generally known as modern Jewish literature discussed here Modern Jewish literature emerged with the Hebrew literature of the Haskalah and broke with religious traditions about literature Therefore it can be distinguished from rabbinic literature which is distinctly religious in character 7 Modern Jewish literature was a unique Jewish literature which often also contributed to the national literatures of many of the countries in which Jews lived Eighteenth century Hebrew literature Edit It was with Moses Hayyim Luzzatto 1707 1746 that Hebrew poetry shook off the medieval fetters which hindered its free development His allegorical drama La Yesharim Tehillah 1743 which may be regarded as the first product of modern Hebrew literature has been described as a poem that in its classic perfection of style is second only to the Bible 8 In Amsterdam Luzzatto s pupil David Franco Mendes 1713 92 in his imitations of Jean Racine Gemul Atalyah and of Metastasio Yehudit continued his master s work though his works are not as respected as were Luzzatto s In Germany the leader of the Haskalah movement Naphtali Hartwig Wessely 1725 1805 has been regarded as the poet laureate of his era 8 Luzzatto and Wessely also wrote works of ethical musar literature and Luzzatto s Mesillat Yesharim gained particular prominence Nineteenth century Hebrew literature Edit See also Revival of the Hebrew language In Galicia important literary artists included Nachman Krochmal 1785 1840 Solomon Judah Loeb Rapoport 1790 1867 and the satirical poet and essayist Isaac Erter 1792 1841 and lyric poet and translator Meir Halevi Letteris 1815 1874 Writers in Amsterdam included the poet Samuel Molder 1789 1862 Writers in Prague included the haskalah leader Jehudah Loeb Jeiteles 1773 1838 author of witty epigrams Bene ha Ne urim and of works directed against Hasidism and against superstition Writers in Hungary included the poet Solomon Lewison of Moor 1789 1822 author of Melitzat Yeshurun the poet Gabriel Sudfeld father of Max Nordau and the poet Simon Bacher Romanian writers of note included Julius Barasch 9 Italian Jewish writers included I S Reggio 1784 1854 Joseph Almanzi Hayyim Salomon Samuel Vita Lolli 1788 1843 Rachel Morpurgo 1790 1860 whose poems evince religious piety and a mystic faith in Israel s future and Samuel David Luzzatto 1800 65 who has been described as the first modern writer to introduce religious romanticism into Hebrew 9 Hebrew writers in the Russian empire included the poet Jacob Eichenbaum the Haskalah leader Isaac Baer Levinsohn Kalman Schulman 1826 1900 who introduced the romantic form into Hebrew the romantic poet Micah Joseph Lebensohn 1828 52 the father of prose Lithuanian author M A Ginzburg and the father of poetry Lithuanian poet Abraham Baer Lebensohn whose poems Shire Sefat Kodesh were extraordinarily successful The creator of the Hebrew novel was Abraham Mapu 1808 67 whose historical romance Ahabat Tziyyon exercised an important influence on the development of Hebrew The poet Judah Leib Leon Gordon was a satirist who has been characterized as an implacable enemy of the Rabbis 9 Early 20th century Hebrew literature Edit Hayim Nahman Bialik 1873 1934 was one of the pioneers of modern Hebrew poetry and came to be recognized as Israel s national poet Bialik contributed significantly to the revival of the Hebrew language His influence is felt deeply in all subsequent Hebrew literature Another prominent Hebrew poet of Bialik s era was Shaul Tchernichovsky 1875 1943 who is especially well known for his nature poetry and for his interest in the culture of ancient Greece Israeli literature Edit Main article Israeli literature Among Israeli writers Shmuel Yosef Agnon won the Nobel Prize for Literature for novels and short stories that employ a unique blend of biblical Talmudic and modern Hebrew Other Israeli authors whose works have been translated into other languages and who have attained international recognition include Ephraim Kishon Yaakov Shabtai A B Yehoshua Amos Oz Irit Linur Etgar Keret and Yehoshua Sobol Yiddish literature Edit Main article Yiddish literature Modern Yiddish literature is generally dated to the publication in 1864 of Sholem Yankev Abramovitsh s novel Dos kleyne mentshele The Little Person The most important of the early writers to follow Abramovitsh were Sholem Rabinovitsh popularly known by his alter ego Sholem Aleichem and I L Peretz Later Yiddish writers of note include Abraham Sutzkever Isaac Bashevis Singer who won the Nobel Prize in 1978 and Chaim Grade American Jewish literature Edit Main article Jewish American literature American Jewish literature written in English includes the works of Gertrude Stein Henry Roth Saul Bellow Norman Mailer Bernard Malamud Alicia Ostriker Chaim Potok and Philip Roth The poetry of Allen Ginsberg often touches on Jewish themes notably the early autobiographical works such as Howl and Kaddish Recent Jewish American literature includes the writings of Paul Auster Michael Chabon Joshua Cohen Jonathan Safran Foer and Art Spiegelman German Jewish literature Edit Jewish authors who wrote in German and made outstanding contributions to world literature include the German poet Heinrich Heine and the Bohemian novelist Franz Kafka Other significant German Jewish poets and essayists include Berthold Auerbach Paul Celan Else Lasker Schuler Ernst Lissauer Jacob Raphael Furstenthal Siegfried Einstein Karl Marx Nelly Sachs Karl Kraus Egon Friedell and Erich Muhsam German Jewish novelists include Lion Feuchtwanger Edgar Hilsenrath Alfred Doblin Arthur Schnitzler Anna Seghers Hermann Broch Franz Werfel Joseph Roth Jakob Wassermann and Stefan Zweig Russian language Jewish literature Edit Isaak Babel 1894 1940 was a Soviet journalist playwright and short story writer acclaimed as the greatest prose writer of Russian Jewry 10 Other Russian writers of Jewish descent include Boris Pasternak who never wrote on Jewish themes Joseph Brodsky a poet who won the Nobel Prize in 1987 Osip Mandelstam another famous poet wooer of Akhmatova and victim of the Soviets Vassily Grossman s experiences in WWII provide the main material for his novels Ladino Literature Edit The primary forms of modern Ladino literature have been fables and folktales 11 Ladino fables and folktales often have Jewish themes with biblical figures and legendary characters and many of them feature the folk character Ejoha also Joha In 2001 the Jewish Publication Society published the first English translation of Ladino folk tales collected by Matilda Koen Sarano Folktales of Joha Jewish Trickster The Misadventures of the Guileful Sephardic Prankster Modern Ladino poets include Margalit Matitiahu Ilan Stavans Avner Peretz Victor Perera Rita Gabbai Simantov and Sara Benveniste Benrey Judeo Tat literature Edit Main article Judeo Tat literature A connoisseur of the Judeo Tat folklore Hizgil Avshalumov created a folklore image of the witty Juhuri Shimi Derbendi Shimi from Derbent A number of poets of the 20th century created their works in the Judeo Tat language such as Sergey Izgiyayev creates Juhuri Imu gelhend sholuminim We are the defenders of the World 1952 Juhuri Fikirgoj shogir Thoughts of the Poet 1966 Juhuri Mugbet ve gismet The fate and love 1972 and a number of other works Shimshun Safonov in 1968 created a collection of poetry Juhuri Parza ma ni ma Fly my verse Poetess Zoya Semenduyeva has released a collection Juhuri Vojgej dul The Command of the Heart In 2007 her book was published Juhuri Duhder en du bebe Daughter of two fathers References Edit a b c Literature Jewish Retrieved 13 July 2015 Emily Taitz Sondra Henry and Cheryl Tallan Sarah of Yemen in The JPS Guide to Jewish Women 600 B C E to 1900 C E Philadelphia The Jewish Publication Society 2003 pp 57 59 The Dream of the Poem Hebrew Poetry from Muslim and Christian Spain 950 1492 ed and trans by Peter Cole Princeton Princeton University Press 2007 pp 27 364 AKERMAN RACHEL JewishEncyclopedia com Retrieved 13 July 2015 Israel Zinberg Old Yiddish Literature from Its Origins to the Haskalah Period KTAV 1975 p 51ff Kozody Maud 2018 From Catalonia to the Caribbean The Sephardic Orbit from Medieval to Modern Times Brill ISBN 9789004376700 LITERATURE MODERN HEBREW JewishEncyclopedia com Retrieved 13 July 2015 a b LITERATURE MODERN HEBREW JewishEncyclopedia com Retrieved 13 July 2015 a b c LITERATURE MODERN HEBREW JewishEncyclopedia com Retrieved 13 July 2015 Neither and Both anthology Joshua Cohen The Forward Arts amp Culture Pg B2 July 6 2007 Ladino Literature My Jewish Learning Retrieved 13 July 2015 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Richard Gottheil N Slouschz 1901 1906 LITERATURE MODERN HEBREW In Singer Isidore et al eds The Jewish Encyclopedia New York Funk amp Wagnalls Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jewish literature amp oldid 1068546225, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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