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Literarishe Bleter

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The Literarishe Bleter (Yiddish: ⁨ליטערארישע בלעטער⁩⁩, lit.'Literary Pages') was a Yiddish weekly periodical published in Warsaw from 1924 to 1939.

Background and creation

In the aftermath of the Russian Revolution of 1905, the Russian Empire's restrictions on the use of the Yiddish language were lifted, leading to a florishing of Yiddish arts, literature, and culture within the Pale of Settlement. The Czernowitz Conference of 1908 proclaimed Yiddish a Jewish national language, leading to the emergence of the Yiddishist movement, opposed to linguistic assimilationism and the Hebraist movement.

In Warsaw, the capital of Russian Poland, an informal community of Yiddish writers emerged, initially centered around the home of playwright I. L. Peretz.

In 1924, the publication of the Polish literary journal Wiadomości Literackie [pl] inspired Yiddish writers to pursue their own literary journal.

Content

References

  1. Geller 2013, pp. 59–61.
  2. Beeri 2013, pp. 60–61.

Bibliography

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