
This book is a comprehensive introductory manual that guides beginners to a functional reading knowledge of late medieval and early modern Yiddish (c.1100-1750). It is the first such manual to exist for that language, whose early literary tradition comprises a range of genres as broad as other contemporary European literary traditions. The guide is organized as a series of progressively more complex lessons, focused on key texts of the literary corpus, which are presented in their authentic form as found in manuscripts and early printed books. The lessons seek to accommodate readers ranging from absolute beginners to those who might already know Hebrew, medieval German, or modern Yiddish. The focal texts are the Old Yiddish midrashic heroic lay,'Joseph the Righteous', from the earliest extant manuscript collection of Yiddish literature (1382), the Middle Yiddish romance adventure tale, 'Briyo and Zimro', from a later collection (1585), and a full canto of the Middle Yiddish epic, Pariz and Viene (1594), each with full glosses and a step-by-step introduction to the morphology, syntax, and phonology. Each lesson also includes a brief supplemental text that cumulatively demonstrates the broad cultural range of the corpus. In addition, several appendices of supplementary material round out the volume, including a collection of additional readings, a table of the manuscript hands and printing fonts employed in the volume, and a full end-glossary of all Yiddish words found in the texts.
This manual establishes a systematic pedagogical framework for acquiring reading proficiency in Old Yiddish, covering the linguistic evolution of the language from 1100 to 1750. Jerold C. Frakes, a scholar of medieval Germanic and Yiddish literature, utilizes a corpus-based approach to bridge the gap between modern Yiddish and its medieval precursors. By analyzing primary source manuscripts and early printed texts, the author provides a structured methodology for students to decode the morphology, syntax, and phonology of the period. The work serves as a foundational bridge for researchers familiar with Hebrew or medieval German to access the breadth of the early Yiddish literary tradition.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and students of medieval literature identify this text as the primary pedagogical resource for accessing early Yiddish manuscripts. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which requires a disciplined approach to the provided grammatical and philological exercises.
Page Count:
464
Publication Date:
2017-01-01
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
ISBN-10:
0191087947
ISBN-13:
9780191087943
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