The Purim-shpil: Origins and Transformations In this paper I consider the origins of the most venerable form of Yiddish theatre, the Purim-shpil. In particular, I note the first attestations of the term Purim-shpil, from its initial appearance in Yiddish texts from 16th-century Italy, to subsequent examples: 1. a Purim-shpil from Germany, from the years 1595-1605 and 2. Eyn sheyn Purim-shpil from Wagenseil�s collection (1697), both published by Chone Shmeruk in 1979. I endeavour to interpret these texts � which cannot yet be defined as fully theatral � within the rich parodic tradition of Purim in Ashkenazi society, and propose that this tradition should be seen not in terms of �popular�, but rather as the fruit of a skilled use of differe...
The Bovo-bukh written by Elia Levita is one of the most famous epics in the history of the Jewish li...
This essay investigates the appearance in the Dutch Purim productions of such contemporary political...
Purim and its Relatives in Tripoli : Comparative Perspective on the Social Uses of Biblical Stories....
The Purim-shpil: Origins and TransformationsIn this paper I consider the origins of the most venerab...
The Jewish theatre in Hebrew has its very first beginning in Italy with the "Wedding Comedy" by Leon...
Prayers, rituals, practices in the Ashkenazic society: : the tradition of Yiddish books of customs (...
ABSTRACT: This article examines the reception history of parodies of the Talmud written for Purim. S...
At the turn of the sixteenth century, Italian Jews usually adapted some of the most common motifs ...
This thesis explores a phenomenon known as “invented Purims.” While the holiday of Purim has been ce...
The Judaeo-Provençal tradition of Purim celebrations is to be considered particularly interesting: ...
This dissertation examines the rise of folk performance as a national and social(ist) symbol in mode...
This essay examines a corpus of fifty plays of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, which in- cl...
This presentation focuses on a Yiddish book of customs written in Venice in the mid-sixteenth centur...
"Purim and bombshell" is the author's recollection of his visit with relatives in Tarnowitz (now, Ta...
Includes passages in Hebrew and German.Dramatization of: Esther."For recitations by young people, es...
The Bovo-bukh written by Elia Levita is one of the most famous epics in the history of the Jewish li...
This essay investigates the appearance in the Dutch Purim productions of such contemporary political...
Purim and its Relatives in Tripoli : Comparative Perspective on the Social Uses of Biblical Stories....
The Purim-shpil: Origins and TransformationsIn this paper I consider the origins of the most venerab...
The Jewish theatre in Hebrew has its very first beginning in Italy with the "Wedding Comedy" by Leon...
Prayers, rituals, practices in the Ashkenazic society: : the tradition of Yiddish books of customs (...
ABSTRACT: This article examines the reception history of parodies of the Talmud written for Purim. S...
At the turn of the sixteenth century, Italian Jews usually adapted some of the most common motifs ...
This thesis explores a phenomenon known as “invented Purims.” While the holiday of Purim has been ce...
The Judaeo-Provençal tradition of Purim celebrations is to be considered particularly interesting: ...
This dissertation examines the rise of folk performance as a national and social(ist) symbol in mode...
This essay examines a corpus of fifty plays of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, which in- cl...
This presentation focuses on a Yiddish book of customs written in Venice in the mid-sixteenth centur...
"Purim and bombshell" is the author's recollection of his visit with relatives in Tarnowitz (now, Ta...
Includes passages in Hebrew and German.Dramatization of: Esther."For recitations by young people, es...
The Bovo-bukh written by Elia Levita is one of the most famous epics in the history of the Jewish li...
This essay investigates the appearance in the Dutch Purim productions of such contemporary political...
Purim and its Relatives in Tripoli : Comparative Perspective on the Social Uses of Biblical Stories....