Become a Jambo Promoter to earn commission on tickets by sharing links with your friends. Learn more
Discover events

Yiddish: A Global Culture | An Evening with David Mazower

An evening exploring the vibrancy of Yiddish culture with David Mazower and the Yiddish Book Center's landmark exhibition catalog

Yiddish: A Global Culture | An Evening with David Mazower Join us for an evening celebrating Yiddish: A Global Culture, the landmark exhibition catalog from the Yiddish Book Center in Amherst, MA—the first museum show to capture the extraordinary vibrancy of modern Yiddish culture. This large-format, 344-page volume, featuring over 300 full-color plates, offers a panoramic look at Yiddish creativity across literature, theater, art, music, and politics, with rare artifacts, essays, and a breathtaking mural of “Yiddishland.” 🎟 Free & open to the public · RSVP recommended ABOUT THE BOOK: Yiddish: A Global Culture at the Yiddish Book Center in Amherst, MA is the first ever museum to showcase the extraordinary vibrancy and breadth of modern Yiddish culture—its literature, theater, art, music, journalism, politics—from the mid-nineteenth century to the present day. This landmark exhibition catalog offers a panoramic view of Yiddish: A Global Culture to the general reader, placing the transnational story of Yiddish within broader world history. The 344 full-color pages include an eight-page gatefold of “Yiddishland,” the exhibition’s 60-foot mural, along with hundreds of stunning reproductions of artworks, rare artifacts, and other key exhibits. With illuminating introductory essays and a timeline highlighting the iconic figures, breakout creative masterpieces, and controversies of the Yiddish world, this volume brings to dramatic life the significance of one remarkable civilization and its ongoing legacy. ABOUT THE AUTHOR: David Mazower is the research bibliographer and editorial director at the Yiddish Book Center and chief curator and writer of the Center’s permanent exhibition, Yiddish: A Global Culture. He oversees the Center’s core collections and co-edits its magazine, Pakn Treger. Author of Yiddish Theatre in London, he is a founder and regular writer for the Digital Yiddish Theatre Project and has published widely on Yiddish popular and print culture, British Jewish history, Jewish art, and the work of his great-grandfather, Yiddish writer Sholem Asch.

RSVP
Jan 20 at 7 PM
Ends at 8:30 PM
265 Aragon Ave, Coral Gables, FL
Be the first interested!

Download the app

Download on the App StoreGet it on Google Play