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Poetics Today 2001 22(1):41-63; DOI:10.1215/03335372-22-1-41
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Duke University Press

Harshav Festschrift Issue III

"Shpeaking Plain" and Writing Foreign: Abraham Cahan's Yekl

Hana Wirth-Nesher

English, Tel Aviv

ABSTRACT

Abraham Cahan's first English novel, Yekl: A Tale of the New York Ghetto, is a multilingual narrative whose literary strategies bear the marks of both Yiddish language and literature and American local color writing at the end of the nineteenth century. This article examines two aspects of "plain speaking" in Cahan's writing; the intersection of these two different cultural and literary traditions in relation to prevailing notions of realism exemplified by the role of William Dean Howells in the creation of Yekl and the poetics of ethnic writing exemplified by the use of dialect, translation strategies, multilingual word play, and other techniques.







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Copyright 2001 by Porter Institute for Poetics and Semiotics, Tel Aviv University