Twentieth-Century Sephardic Authors from the Former Yugoslavia: A Judeo-Spanish Tradition

Twentieth-Century Sephardic Authors from the Former Yugoslavia: A Judeo-Spanish Tradition - Studies in Hispanic and Lusophone Cultures

Hardback (28 Sep 2020)

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Publisher's Synopsis

In the twentieth century, various Sephardic authors from the former Yugoslavia took upon themselves the task of revitalising different forms of Judeo-Spanish oral tradition such as narrative, songs or ballads. These forms were fostered in the language of the Sepharadim, Ladino or Judeo-Spanish, since the expulsion of the Jews from the Iberian Peninsula in 1492. In their diaspora the Sepharadim mainly settled in the Ottoman Empire whose collapse began at the end of the nineteenth century. This disintegration followed later on by the Holocaust resulted in a rapid decline of the Sephardic language and tradition, causing UNESCO in 2002 to declare Ladino a seriously endangered language. In this interdisciplinary cultural study, Zeljko Jovanovic examines the efforts of the Yugoslav Sephardic authors to preserve the memory of a culture and a language in decline as their way of constructing their own personal and collective narrative and identity.

Zeljko Jovanovic is a researcher in Sephardic studies at the Institute of Language, Literature and Anthropology (ILLA) of the CSIC (Madrid, Spain).

Book information

ISBN: 9781781888513
Publisher: Modern Humanities Research Assoc
Imprint: Legenda
Pub date:
Language: English
Number of pages: 224
Weight: 550g
Height: 179mm
Width: 251mm
Spine width: 21mm