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Listening To The Languages Of The People Lazare Sainan On Romanian Yiddish And French Natalie Zemon Davis

  • SKU: BELL-51922386
Listening To The Languages Of The People Lazare Sainan On Romanian Yiddish And French Natalie Zemon Davis
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Listening To The Languages Of The People Lazare Sainan On Romanian Yiddish And French Natalie Zemon Davis instant download after payment.

Publisher: Central European University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 2.09 MB
Pages: 200
Author: Natalie Zemon Davis
ISBN: 9789633865941, 9633865948
Language: English
Year: 2022

Product desciption

Listening To The Languages Of The People Lazare Sainan On Romanian Yiddish And French Natalie Zemon Davis by Natalie Zemon Davis 9789633865941, 9633865948 instant download after payment.

This tale of great achievements and great disappointments offers a fresh perspective on the interplay between scholarship and political sentiment in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.


Lazăr Șăineanu (1859-1934), linguist and folklorist, was a pioneer in his native Romania, seeking out the popular elements in culture along with high literary ones. He was the first to publish a study of Yiddish as a genuine language, and he uncovered Turkish features in Romanian language and customs. He also made an index of hundreds of Romanian folktales. Yet when he sought Romanian citizenship and a professorship, he was blocked by powerful figures who thought Jews could not be Romanians and who fancied the origins of Romanian culture to be wholly Latin. Faced with anti-Semitism, some of his friends turned to Zionism. Instead he tried baptism, which brought him only mockery and shame.


Hoping to find a polity to which he could belong, Șăineanu moved with his family to Paris in 1900 and became Lazare Sainéan. There he made innovative studies of French popular speech and slang, culminating in his great work on the origins of that language. Once again, he was contributing to the development of a national tongue. Even then, while welcomed by literary scholars, Sainéan was unable to get a permanent university post. Though a naturalized citizen of France, he felt himself a foreigner, an “intruder,” into his old age.

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