YIVO-Bard Summer Program
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Past Events

2017

Thursday
Dec 21
7:00pm

A Very Jewish Christmas

This evening will feature a raucous singalong of our favorite Jewishly-inflected holiday songs, and special guest Jody Rosen, author of White Christmas: The Story of an American Song, who will discuss the unique phenomenon that is Jewish contributions to Christmas music. Afterwards we’ll celebrate with a free reception with Chinese food. 

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Wednesday
Dec 13
7:30pm

A Yiddish Liederabend — An Evening of Yiddish Song

YIVO presents an elegant as well as nostalgic program devoted to treasures of Yiddish song and the poetry that has inspired this musical expression in all its variety of style. Neil W. Levin will deliver the pre-concert lecture on the development of the Yiddish lieder tradition and its literary basis.

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Tuesday
Dec 12
6:00pm

The Processing of Fish and Fowl in Elye Bokher’s ‘Ha-mavdil Song’

In his Old Yiddish poem, ‘Ha-mavdil Song,’ Elye Bokher uses fish and fowl as vehicles of his critique of an intellectual with whom he was engaging in a polemic.

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Tuesday
Dec 12
3:00pm

Back from the USSR: In the Footsteps of the Soviet Yiddish Propaganda Song "Hey Djankoye"

This lecture will trace the migration of a Yiddish propaganda song, which was originally written in the 1920s to encourage Soviet Jews to join the new colonies in Crimea and to become farmers, and which was revived in the 1960s by American folk singers.

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Thursday
Nov 30
7:00pm

Cantata Profana performs Gustav Mahler’s 'Das Lied von der Erde'

For this program YIVO joins forces with the young, “intrepid” (New Yorker) vocal and instrumental chamber ensemble Cantata Profana to present Gustav Mahler’s epic song symphony, Das Lied von der Erde (The Song of the Earth) in Arnold Schoenberg and Rainer Riehn’s chamber orchestra arrangement.

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Tuesday
Nov 28
3:00pm

Polish Jews and Leisure Travel during the Interwar Period

How did Polish Jews had become tourists and what role Landkentenish Society (the Jewish Society for Knowledge of the Land) played in facilitating this process? The talk will draw on Yiddish and Polish travel guides, guidebooks, manuals and magazines for neophyte tourists published in the 1920s and 1930s. 

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Monday
Nov 20
7:00pm

Bad Rabbi and Other Strange but True Stories from the Yiddish Press

An underground history of downwardly mobile Jews, Bad Rabbi mines the Yiddish press to expose the seamy underbelly of pre-WWII New York and Warsaw, the two major centers of Yiddish culture in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.

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Sunday
Nov 19
2:00pm

Sleuthing in Yiddish: The Yiddish Forward as a Source for Family History Information

In this presentation, Samuel Norich, president of the Forward Association, the not-for-profit publisher of the Forward and the Forverts, will provide an overview of the role the Yiddish Forward has played for American Jews for the past 120 years.

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Monday
Nov 13
7:00pm

The Virtual Archive: Imagining I.N. Steinberg’s Jewish Refuge in the Kimberley

This presentation reviews an exciting collaborative project that constructs a virtual world to image and imagine I. N. Steinberg’s plans for a Jewish refugee settlement in the Kimberley region of Western Australia.

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Sun/Mon Nov 5-6

Jews In and After the 1917 Russian Revolution

YIVO presents a two-day conference on Jews in and after the 1917 Russian Revolution. The conference explores the context of, and immediate reaction to the Revolution, Jewish life in the Soviet Union, and the Revolution’s lasting impact today.

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Thursday
Nov 2
3:00pm

From the Cellar to the Top Floor

This lecture will examine the beginnings of the Hebrew Alphabet periodical press in the United States during the second half of the 19th century and its establishment there – a fascinating chapter in the social and cultural history of American Jewry.

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Sunday
Oct 22
1:00pm

120th Anniversary of the Founding of the Jewish Labor Bund

YIVO celebrates the 120th anniversary of the founding of the Jewish Labor Bund, the socialist movement which has figured so prominently in the history of East European and World Jewry.

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Wednesday
Oct 18
3:00pm

Mystic, Teacher, Troublemaker: Shimon Engel and the Challenges of Hasidic Yeshiva Education in Interwar Poland

This talk will explore Shimon Engel Horowic’s idea of Hasidic education as an alternative solution to the interwar crisis that befell the Hasidic communities.

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Tuesday
Oct 10
7:00pm

The Book Smugglers

The Book Smugglers chronicles a little-known chapter from the darkest days of Jewish history: the story of the courageous Jews of the “Paper Brigade,” who risked their lives to rescue thousands of rare books and manuscripts—from the Nazis and the Soviets—by hiding them on their bodies, burying them in bunkers in the Vilna Ghetto, and smuggling them across borders.  

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Tuesday
Oct 3
7:00pm

Henech Kon: Beyond the Dybbuk

Henech Kon is best known today as the composer of the film score for The Dybbuk. He was, however, also a brilliant pianist and musicologist, and wrote arrangements for dozens of Yiddish songs and other scores. This lecture will present Kon’s life and work, and help to bring him the recognition he is due – and his music back on stage.

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Class starts Oct 3 6:00pm-8:00pm

Introduction to Old Yiddish

Note: This course will now start on October 3 (previously September 5). A basic introduction to the Old Literary Language through a tour of some of its most important works, from poems dating back to the Cambridge Codex (1382), to Glikl of Hamil's memoirs of the 17th – 18th centuries.

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Sunday
Sep 24
1:00pm

Nusakh Vilne Memorial

Join us for our annual event commemorating the Jewish community of Vilna through poetry, music, and presentation. A reception will follow the presentations.

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Tuesday
Sep 19
3:00pm

Singing for the Bride and Groom in Early Modern Ashkenaz

This lecture will reveal the nature of singing during Jewish weddings in Ashkenaz and will answer questions such as: who was allowed to sing what to whom and when? And which repertoire did female singers perform and how?

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Sunday
Sep 17
1:30pm

Chuck Fishman: Roots, Resilience and Renewal

From 1975 to 1983 Chuck Fishman traveled to Poland to photograph what was then a dwindling remnant of a once-vibrant Jewish community, a thousand years of history on the brink of extinction. Join us on September 17 for the opening reception of this exhibition, with a talk by the photographer, at the Derfner Judaica Museum.

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Thursday
Sep 14
7:00pm

A Traveler Undisguised: "Mendele Moykher Sforim” as a Modern Jewish Intellectual

2017 marks the 100th yortsayt of famed Yiddish author Sholem Yankev Abramovitsh—a writer better known by his pseudonym, Mendele Moykher Sforim, Mendele the Book Peddler.

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Wednesday
Aug 2
6:00pm

Summer Yiddish Song Celebration

A concert in celebration of the rich breadth of music with Yiddish lyrics including Yiddish Theater Songs, Yiddish Folk Songs, and Yiddish Art Songs.

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Thursday
Jul 27
6:30pm

Chaim Beider: Poet, Editor, Essayist

This year, in memory of the Yiddish artists and writers who were murdered by the regime or suffered from repressions and cultural purges in the Soviet Union, the Congress for Jewish Culture joins with the YIVO Institute for Jewish Research and the Jewish Labor Committee to present Boris Sandler's new film, a one-on-one interview with his old mentor and friend, Chaim Beider (1920-2003).

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Tuesday
Jul 11
7:00pm

The Muses of Bashevis Singer

Join us for a screening of director Asaf Galay’s documentary, The Muses of Bashevis Singer, about Yiddish writer Singer’s ‘harem’ of translators and their vital role in his creative work. Q&A to follow.

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Sunday
Jul 9
1:00pm

Annual Mordkhe Schaechter Memorial Program

YIVO and the League for Yiddish cordially invite you to the annual all-Yiddish program in Memory of Dr. Mordkhe and Charne Schaechter.

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Thursday
Jun 29
6:00pm

The Writers, Artists, Singers and Musicians of the National Hungarian Jewish Cultural Association (OMIKE), 1939-1944

In response to anti-Semitic laws passed in 1938 in Hungary, barring Jewish artists from practising their professions, Budapest’s Jewish community leaders organized an artistic group under the aegis of OMIKE Országos Magyar Izraelita Közművelődési Egyesület (Hungarian Jewish Education Association) to provide employment opportunities for Jewish actors, musicians, singers, composers, writers and artists.

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Thursday
Jun 29
3:00pm

Abraham Cahan and the Inception of the Yiddish ‘Yellow Press’

The epithet 'gele prese' (yellow press) was often leveled at the socialist Yiddish Forverts by critics of its editor, Abraham Cahan, who accused him of imitating the methods of American newspapermen Joseph Pulitzer and William Randolph Hearst to the detriment of the Yiddish reading audience.

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Thursday
Jun 22
7:00pm

Jews and the Left Reconsidered

In the last decades of the 19th century, and the first decades of the 20th, Jews held highly visible positions in a number of different left-wing movements. Can this phenomenon be explained by referring to Jewish religious tenets? Can it be explained by the marginality of the Jewish population?

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Wednesday
Jun 21
7:00pm

Jewish Songs and Dances: Music from the Archive of Lazare Saminsky

This concert explores the legacy of composer Lazare Saminsky (1882-1959), whose oeuvre represents a broad cross section of Jewish music ranging from sacred to secular. His songs set texts in Hebrew, Yiddish, Ladino, and more, and his music takes its inspiration from all around the Jewish world. This program is located in Temple Emanu-El, 5th Avenue at 65th Street, NYC.

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Tuesday
Jun 20
3:00pm

The Myth of the Khazar Conversion and the Origin of the Ashkenazi Jews

For about 150 years, there has been a great deal of fascination, in certain limited circles, in the story of the conversion of the Khazars to Judaism and the possible link between them and Ashkenazi Jews.

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Trip starts Jun 20

2017 Lithuania and Poland Study Tour

YIVO hosted an enlightening journey to Lithuania and Poland in June of 2017.

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Tuesday
Jun 6
3:00pm

Folkism and Yiddish Culture in Interwar Lithuania

In this talk Michael Casper discusses the emergence of Lithuanian Folkism, and its vision for Yiddish, in late 1910s and early 1920s.

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Wednesday
May 24
7:00pm

The Yiddish Celluloid Closet and the Isle of Klezbos

Despite the taboo surrounding homosexuality, the topic was too intriguing to be left entirely out of the Yiddish picture. The Yiddish Celluloid Closet program presents Yiddish cinema as you’ve never seen it, plus Isle of Klezbos’ loving and live reinterpretations of movie music from the revelatory soundtracks.

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Monday
May 22
3:00pm

Isaac Bashevis Singer – Jewish Storyteller and Iconoclast

Through a presentation of his early fiction and criticism published in Warsaw journals 1925-1933, this lecture will delineate the beginnings of Yitskhok Bashevis as a Yiddish storyteller.

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Tuesday
May 16
3:00pm

The Rise and Fall of The King of Lampedusa in London’s Yiddish Theatre

This talk will look at the history of London’s Yiddish theatres before telling the story of its most successful production: The King of Lampedusa.

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Monday
May 8
7:00pm

Drunk from the Bitter Truth: The Poems of Anna Margolin

This meeting of the 16th Street Book Club will discuss Drunk from the Bitter Truth: The Poems of Anna Margolin, translated from the Yiddish by Shirley Kumove.

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Thursday
May 4
7:00pm

Annie Gosfield Portrait Concert

This concert explores music of composer Annie Gosfield that takes its inspiration from Jewish culture, history, and the New York immigrant experience.

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Wednesday
May 3
6:30pm

Crackpot or Visionary: Israel Zangwill, Isaac Steinberg, and the Jewish Territorialist Movement

In this talk, Dr. Laura Almagor will touch upon the colorful life stories of the central Territorialist leaders, as a gateway to exploring the history of the Territorialist movement and its many—nowadays seemingly fantastical—pursuits. 

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Wednesday
May 3
6:00pm

Roots, Resilience, Renewal

From 1975 to 1983 Chuck Fishman traveled to Poland to photograph what was then a dwindling remnant of a once-vibrant Jewish community, a thousand years of history on the brink of extinction. After a 30-year hiatus, he has returned to witness and document a stunning reversal of history—a Jewish cultural renaissance emerging and expanding into the mainstream of 21st century society. Located at Fordham School of Law, Lincoln Center Campus.

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Tuesday
May 2
3:00pm

Jews, Partisans, and Ethnic Strife in Belarus during the Second World War

Of about a quarter of a million Soviet guerilla fighters or partisans that fought during the Second World War, perhaps 15,000 were Jews, and most fought in Belarus. After the war, Jewish partisans drew radically different conclusions from their experiences and went in very different directions.

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Monday
May 1
10:00am

Being a Jew in the Soviet Union: Findings from 'A Comprehensive History of the Jews in the Soviet Union'

Join us for this unique opportunity to hear from renowned scholars working on A Comprehensive History of the Jews in the Soviet Union as they share their findings with the public in this day-long conference.

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Sunday
Apr 30
2:00pm

Leading Scholars from Around the World Discuss: Growing Up Jewish

Before World War II, Jewish culture blossomed throughout Eastern Europe and in the growing Ashkenazi diaspora. Scholars Samuel Kassow, Miriam Udel, Naomi Seidman, and Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett will discuss the lives of children in this Jewish world.

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Sunday
Apr 30
11:00am

Children's Day

A morning of activity and cultural immersion for children of all ages; join us for sing-alongs, storytelling, and puppetry inspired by the lives of Jewish children before World War II.

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Monday
Apr 24
6:30pm

"When We Remembered Zion:" The New Budapest Orpheum Society Commemorates Yom HaShoah

Drawing from repertories of Jewish song from the Holocaust gathered from the cabarets, camps, ghettos, theaters, and films, the 2016 Grammy-nominated New Budapest Orpheum Society bears witness to those murdered, those who resisted, and those who must not be forgotten.

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Thursday
Mar 16
6:30pm

How They Lived: The Everyday Lives of Hungarian Jews 1867 – 1940, with Andras Koerner and Victor Karady

Supported by more than two hundred photographs, the second volume of András Koerner’s history, How They Lived – The Everyday Lives of Hungarian Jews, 1867-1940 examines in great detail how the Hungarian Jews lived their everyday lives—how they raised their children, spent their leisure time, practiced their religion, performed their charity work, and more.

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Monday
Mar 6
6:00pm

Oedipus in Brooklyn and Other Stories by Blume Lempel

Blume Lempel (1907-1999) was a courageous storyteller whose narrative imagination moved fluidly between past and present, Old World and New, dream and reality, modern-day New York and prewar Poland, girlhood dreams and old-age imaginings.

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Class starts Feb 28 6:00pm-8:00pm

Political Thinkers of East European Jewry

In the 19th and 20th centuries, the world of East European Jewry was transformed by sweeping changes. Political thought has often been sparked by such change – and this was certainly true on the Jewish street. This course will focus on the ideas of Dubnow, Zhitlowsky, Pinsker, Ahad Ha’am, Syrkin, Borochov, Scherer, and Jabotinsky.

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Monday
Feb 6
7:00pm

Money, Love, and Shame

Isidore Zolotarevski’s legendary 1910 melodrama will be presented at YIVO in a new English translation by writer/director Allen Lewis Rickman in a ‘rehearsed reading’ format, for one performance only. Not for the weak of heart, “Money, Love, and Shame!” is a wild ride with a group of dysfunctional Jewish immigrants. Though considered “shund,” or “trash” by critics, it was one of the most popular and most often produced plays on the Yiddish stage.

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Sunday
Jan 22
1:00pm

The History and Future of the Strashun Library

Matisyahu Strashun (1817-1885), a wealthy book collector, scholar, intellectual, and philanthropist from Vilna, amassed one of the biggest and most important private Jewish libraries in Eastern Europe during the 19th century.

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Class starts Jan 19 6:00pm-8:30pm

[WP2017] Hannah Arendt and the Jewish Question

This course traces the evolution of Hannah Arendt’s views on modern Jewish experience from her early work on the nineteenth-century Berlin Saloniste Rahel Varnhagen to her 1963 study of Adolf Eichmann, who in her eyes was emblematic of the “banality of evil.”

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Class starts Jan 4 6:00pm-8:30pm

[WP2017] Reading Isaac Babel's Red Cavalry

This course will be an intensive, close reading of Isaac Babel’s masterpiece, Red Cavalry (1926). We will pay attention specifically to the literary elements of Babel’s unique style and explore how this style contributes to the development of his themes of war, the Revolution, the fate of the Jewish people, and the narrator’s own tragically conflicted inner drama of identity, conscience, and commitment.

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Class starts Jan 4 1:30pm-4:00pm

[WP2017] Jewish Humor: From Yiddish Folktales to Curb Your Enthusiasm

This course will survey the development of Jewish humor as a cultural phenomenon during the 19th and 20th centuries, focusing mainly on the history of American Jewish comedic output, but also delving into Jewish material from Eastern Europe, the USSR, and Israel.

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Class starts Jan 4 10:00am-12:30pm

[WP2017] The Tragedy of Europe’s Jerusalem: Lithuania’s Jews and the Holocaust

This course will examine several critical aspects of the history of Lithuania’s Jews during the twentieth century, examining the transformation of the region after the Great War; the Holocaust; and a survey of topics specific to the Holocaust in Lithuania with an emphasis on local history and case studies of selected locales and personal histories.

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Class starts Jan 3 6:30pm-8:30pm

[WP2017] Yiddish Culture in Wartime, 1939-1945

This course will consider essays, diaries, songs and poetry written during the Holocaust. It will focus on writings from the ghettos of pre-war Poland and Lithuania and, in keeping with the purposes of the YIVO, on materials written originally in Yiddish.

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Class starts Jan 3 1:30pm-4:00pm

[WP2017] At the Edge of the Abyss: Jewish Intellectual Responses to Nazism, 1933-1940

This course will explore Jewish intellectual responses to Nazism from the rise of Hitler in 1933 to the first year of World War Two in 1939-1940.

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Class starts Jan 3 1:30pm-4:00pm

[WP2017] What Kind of Jew Was Spinoza?

What was the relation between Baruch Spinoza and Judaism and how did he transform the Jewish tradition? And perhaps most importantly, how did his transformation of Judaism bear on the development of modernity? This course will examine these questions through a close reading of Spinoza’s most important Jewish text, The Theologico-Political Treatise (1670).

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Class starts Jan 3 10:00am-12:30pm

[WP2017] Modern Yiddish Theater

An abiding source of modern Yiddish creativity can be found in its encounters with the cultures it flourished alongside. This course explores border-crossings of genre and language as essential to the cultivation and vigor of any modern theatrical culture, particularly in the Yiddish theater.

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