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 6: Line 6:
* 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.
* 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.
** Best known is ''Nă hOacosăn 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.)
** Best known is ''Nă hOacosăn 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.)
** Something secular and more directly anti-nationalist or anti-religious (satirizing both Hibernists and Zionists). I won't say more; I just hate nationalism.
** Something secular and more directly anti-nationalist or anti-religious
* 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.
139,486

edits

Navigation menu