Skip to main navigation
Skip to search
Skip to main content
Tel Aviv University Home
Update Request & User Guide (TAU staff only)
Home
Experts
Research units
Research output
Datasets
Prizes
Activities
Press/Media
Search by expertise, name or affiliation
Call it English: The languages of Jewish American literature
Hana Wirth-Nesher
*
*
Corresponding author for this work
Department of English and American Studies
Research output
:
Book/Report
›
Book
›
peer-review
54
Scopus citations
Overview
Fingerprint
Fingerprint
Dive into the research topics of 'Call it English: The languages of Jewish American literature'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.
Sort by
Weight
Alphabetically
Keyphrases
United States
100%
Cultural Translation
100%
Jewish American Literature
100%
Native-born
50%
Holocaust
50%
Hebrew
50%
Immigrants
50%
Jews
50%
Bilingual
50%
Jewish
50%
Transnational
50%
Jewish Culture
50%
Nativism
50%
Late Nineteenth Century
50%
Schwartz
50%
Exile
50%
Philip Roth
50%
Social Transformation
50%
Linguistic Dimension
50%
Yiddish Language
50%
Jewish Americans
50%
Minority Literature
50%
Letter to the Hebrews
50%
Pronunciation
50%
Literary Strategy
50%
Paley
50%
Diction
50%
Multilingual Writing
50%
Saul Bellow
50%
Bilingual Wordplay
50%
Prose Writing
50%
Ancestral Language
50%
Cynthia Ozick
50%
Language Debates
50%
Sacred Language
50%
Local Color
50%
Bernard Malamud
50%
Ethnic Literature
50%
Migrant Writing
50%
Figurality
50%
Arts and Humanities
Judaism
100%
American literature
100%
English
100%
Cross-cultural Translation
40%
Multilingualism
40%
Secular
20%
Holocaust
20%
Linguistics
20%
Jews
20%
Jewish culture
20%
Transnational
20%
Exiles
20%
Philip Roth
20%
Late Nineteenth Century
20%
Familial
20%
Social transformation
20%
Preoccupation
20%
Hebrew letters
20%
Literary Strategy
20%
Evasion
20%
Grace Paley
20%
Local Colour
20%
Saul Bellow
20%
Ethnic Literature
20%
pertinence
20%
Nativism
20%
Post-war America
20%
Word-play
20%
Creative Encounters
20%
Authors
20%
Americas
20%