Mendele: Yiddish literature and language ______________________________________________________ Contents of Vol. 14.013 October 6, 2004 1) Yiddish Western/Frontier texts (Hershl Hartman) 2) prost un grob (Moyshe-Shaye Steinlauf) 3) prost un grob (Eli Goodman) 4) prost un grob (Fishl Kutner) 5) prost un grob (Abraham Melezin) 6) pareve (Meyer Zaremba) 7) shier nisht (Martin Green) 8) botshvines (Rick Turkel) 9) botshvines (Jack Berger) Visit Mendele on the Web: http://www.mendele.net 1)---------------------------------------------------- Date: October 4, 2004 From: hershl@earthlink.net Subject: Re: Yiddish Western/Frontier texts Re: Warren Hoffman's inquiry, vol 14, no. 11: There are many Yiddish poems and stories about life in Far West Los Angeles to be found on the pages of the literary journal "khezhbon," still appearing in L.A. after 75 years, as well as in many, many other sources. As to the "Old West," I'd suggest consulting the catalogs at YIVO and NYBC for the works of Shmuel (Samuel) Daixel (daled-pasekh tsvey yudn-kuf-lamed), a teacher for many decades in the Secular Yiddish shuln and counselor at Camp Kinderland. Daixel wrote about his life as adopted son of an Indian tribe in the Southwest. His students and campers were never entirely convinced that his stories were true -- although he looked the part facially and in height, especially when wrapped in an Indian blanket and wearing an eagle's feather -- but they were fascinated nonetheless. The only English translation of Daixel's work that I know of (appearing in "Nine One-Act Plays From the Yiddish," translated by Bessie F. White, 1932, John W. Luce & Co., Boston) does not deal with the West. Hershl Hartman 2)---------------------------------------------------- Date: October 6, 2004 From: msteinlauf@earthlink.net Subject: Re: prost un grob Prost is not necessarily pejorative. One can say "Er iz a proster nor an erlikher" meaning he's simple but decent. Grob has no redeeming context. A grus, Moyshe-Shaye Steinlauf Philadelphia 3)---------------------------------------------------- Date: October 6, 2004 From: JEGCC@CUNYVM.CUNY.EDU Subject: Re: prost un grob A `grober yung' is a coarse or vulgar young man; `prost' has more of a connotation of `ordinary,' as in the old joke: `Seen my toots?' `Vos far a toots -- a sheyne toots? A blonde toots? `Neyn -- a proste toots.' Eli Goodman 4)---------------------------------------------------- Date: M