Description

Book Synopsis
Presents some of the most outstanding and hilarious examples of Jewish dialect humour drawn from the five books Milt Gross (1895-1953) published between 1926 and 1928 - "Nize Baby", "De Night in de Front from Chreesmas", "Hiawatta", "Dunt Esk", and "Famous Fimmales".

Trade Review
Is Diss a System? brings back Milt Gross with a bang. Artist, tongue-twisting language humorist, Gross was a great figure of American popular culture in the first half of the twentieth century, sadly forgotten . . . until now! Kelman has given us all a gift by selecting, annotating and celebrating a multiculturalism that rings with humor, humanism and a spirit we all need as much as ever. Hurrah! -- Paul Buhle,editor of Jews and American Comics
Milt Gross is a lost wonder of the American literary funhouse. A blessing on the head of Ari Y. Kelman for bringing him, roaring, back to mad and vivid life. -- Michael Chabon,author of The Yiddish Policemen’s Union: A Novel
Nearly thirty years before my birth, Milt Gross had already turned the kind of English that I heard every day into great and significant art, delighting kids like me as much as he offended the Pecksniffian alte kakers who sought to purge American Jewish culture of every trace of real Yiddish and real Yiddish life. Gross was the bomb under Molly Goldbergs tukhes. Is Diss a System?, a book that needs to be spoken as much as it needs to be read, makes some of his best work available to an audience that might never have suspected what its been missing. -- Michael Wex,author of Born to Kvetch and Just Say Nu
It is Grosss good fortune, and ours, that a most recent generation of Americans has reclaimed him as its own or, at the very least, brought his talents to the fore once more. Is Diss a System? A Milt Gross Comic Reader is a case in point, a showcase of his many gifts. . . . In his championing of Milt Gross, Kelman assumes his rightful place as a cultural archaeologist of American Jewrys vernacular culture. He belongs, in fact, to a new generation of American Jewish intellectuals who are determined to recoverand to celebratewhat their forbears had consigned to the attic or dismissed as a curiosity. * The New Republic *

Table of Contents
AcknowledgmentsIntroductionGeeve A. Lesten and Ari Y. KelmanNize Baby (1926) (Excerpts)Dunt Esk! (1927) De Night in de Front from Chreesmas (1927)Hiawatta (1926)Famous Fimmales (1928)Assorted Milt Gross Images BibliographyAbout the Editor

Is Diss a System A Milt Gross Comic Reader

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A Hardback by Ari Y. Kelman

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    View other formats and editions of Is Diss a System A Milt Gross Comic Reader by Ari Y. Kelman

    Publisher: New York University Press
    Publication Date: 09/12/2009
    ISBN13: 9780814748237, 978-0814748237
    ISBN10: 0814748236

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    Presents some of the most outstanding and hilarious examples of Jewish dialect humour drawn from the five books Milt Gross (1895-1953) published between 1926 and 1928 - "Nize Baby", "De Night in de Front from Chreesmas", "Hiawatta", "Dunt Esk", and "Famous Fimmales".

    Trade Review
    Is Diss a System? brings back Milt Gross with a bang. Artist, tongue-twisting language humorist, Gross was a great figure of American popular culture in the first half of the twentieth century, sadly forgotten . . . until now! Kelman has given us all a gift by selecting, annotating and celebrating a multiculturalism that rings with humor, humanism and a spirit we all need as much as ever. Hurrah! -- Paul Buhle,editor of Jews and American Comics
    Milt Gross is a lost wonder of the American literary funhouse. A blessing on the head of Ari Y. Kelman for bringing him, roaring, back to mad and vivid life. -- Michael Chabon,author of The Yiddish Policemen’s Union: A Novel
    Nearly thirty years before my birth, Milt Gross had already turned the kind of English that I heard every day into great and significant art, delighting kids like me as much as he offended the Pecksniffian alte kakers who sought to purge American Jewish culture of every trace of real Yiddish and real Yiddish life. Gross was the bomb under Molly Goldbergs tukhes. Is Diss a System?, a book that needs to be spoken as much as it needs to be read, makes some of his best work available to an audience that might never have suspected what its been missing. -- Michael Wex,author of Born to Kvetch and Just Say Nu
    It is Grosss good fortune, and ours, that a most recent generation of Americans has reclaimed him as its own or, at the very least, brought his talents to the fore once more. Is Diss a System? A Milt Gross Comic Reader is a case in point, a showcase of his many gifts. . . . In his championing of Milt Gross, Kelman assumes his rightful place as a cultural archaeologist of American Jewrys vernacular culture. He belongs, in fact, to a new generation of American Jewish intellectuals who are determined to recoverand to celebratewhat their forbears had consigned to the attic or dismissed as a curiosity. * The New Republic *

    Table of Contents
    AcknowledgmentsIntroductionGeeve A. Lesten and Ari Y. KelmanNize Baby (1926) (Excerpts)Dunt Esk! (1927) De Night in de Front from Chreesmas (1927)Hiawatta (1926)Famous Fimmales (1928)Assorted Milt Gross Images BibliographyAbout the Editor

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