Isidor Borchardt

1865–1932

Born in Jastrow, Prussia (today Jastrowie, Poland) to a traditional Orthodox family, Isidor Borchardt was a German-language author of what were called “ghetto tales,” literature about a recently vanished traditional Jewish life in the German lands written for modern or modernizing Jews who were already consuming German-language culture primarily or exclusively. Interestingly, Borchardt’s stories of provincial life, based on his own youthful experience, often present Judeo-German (a mix of Western Yiddish and German generally assumed to have been used exclusively by German Jews) as having been the shared vernacular of Jews and their gentile neighbors.

Entries in the Posen Library by This Creator

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The Ignoramus: A Cultural Sketch

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Text
Aron Wolf often terrified us children, and yet he was one of the most harmless people one can imagine. He never hurt anyone, nor did he ever approach any of us with as much as a word. But…