Verse:Irta/Judeo-Mandarin/Literature: Difference between revisions

Jump to navigation Jump to search
m
no edit summary
mNo edit summary
Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit
mNo edit summary
Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit
Line 4: Line 4:
** Hibernism (ער'ינאכוּת ''Eřinăchüs''; resettling in Ireland and becoming Gaelic pagans again) shows up during this period but it's widely derided as a bunch of fringe loons.
** Hibernism (ער'ינאכוּת ''Eřinăchüs''; resettling in Ireland and becoming Gaelic pagans again) shows up during this period but it's widely derided as a bunch of fringe loons.
* Post-Learăgüs writers, as well as traditionally religious Gaelic Jews, criticized the new Gaelic loans and other Learagüsiș features as not being authentically Ăn Yidiș. Some used coinages from newly revived Hebrew, further enriching Ăn Yidiș vocabulary.
* Post-Learăgüs writers, as well as traditionally religious Gaelic Jews, criticized the new Gaelic loans and other Learagüsiș features as not being authentically Ăn Yidiș. Some used coinages from newly revived Hebrew, further enriching Ăn Yidiș vocabulary.
** Best known is ''Năh Șģełăn ag ___'', a cycle of quasi-Lovecraftian sci-fi works (which nevertheless allude to a lot to Jewish legends and texts); it uses flowery exaggerated Learăgüsiș for effect and uses Old Irish- and otherwise Celtic-inspired gibberish for names of eldritch gods. (The subtext is that Jews shouldn't stray from Orthodox Jewish religion and that pure human rationality is deeply flawed as a life path.)
** Best known is ''Năh Șģełăn ag ___'', a cycle of quasi-Lovecraftian sci-fi works (which nevertheless allude to many Jewish legends and texts); it uses flowery exaggerated Learăgüsiș for effect and uses Old Irish- and otherwise Celtic-inspired gibberish for names of eldritch gods. (The subtext is that Jews shouldn't stray from Orthodox Jewish religion and that pure human rationality is deeply flawed as a life path.)
* Modern Ăn Yidiș literature is produced by both secular and Haredi Jewish communities.
* Modern Ăn Yidiș literature is produced by both secular and Haredi Jewish communities.
138,989

edits

Navigation menu