Authors: Henry Roth
8
. See Max Weinreich,
History of the Yiddish Language
(Chicago, 1980); Uriel Weinreich,
Languages in Contact: Findings and Problems
(New York, 1953); Itamar Even-Zohar, “The Nature and Functionalization of the Language of Literature Under Diglossia” [Hebrew],
Hasifrut
2 (1970): 286â302, and “Aspects of the Hebrew-Yiddish Polysystem,” in
Polysystem Theory
(forthcoming); Benjamin and Barbara Harshav,
American Yiddish Poetry
(Berkeley, 1986); Dan Miron,
A Traveler Disguised: A Study in the Rise of Modern Yiddish Fiction in the Nineteenth Century
(New York, 1973).
9
. Max Weinreich, p. 249.
10
. M. M. Bakhtin,
The Dialogic Imagination
(Austin, 1981), p. 292.
11
. Meir Sternberg, “Polylingualism as Reality and Translation as Mimesis,”
Poetics Today 2
(1981): 225â32.
12
. Dorrit Cohn,
Transparent Minds: Narrative Modes for Presenting Consciousness in Fiction
(Princeton, 1978).
    For illuminating readings of
Call It Sleep
see Murray Baumgarten,
City Scriptures: Modern Jewish Writing
(Cambridge, Mass., 1982); Naomi Diamant, “Linguistic Universes in Henry Roth's
Call It Sleep,” Contemporary Literature
27 (1986): 336â55; Wayne Lesser, “A Narrative's Revolutionary Energy: The Example of Henry Roth's
Call It Sleep,” Criticism
23 (1981): 155â76.
13
. Max Weinreich, “Yiddishkayt and Yiddish: On the Impact of Religion on Language in Ashkenazic Jewry,” in
Readings in the Sociology of Language,
ed. Joshua Fishman (The Hague, 1968), p. 410.
14
. Max Weinreich,
History of the Yiddish Language,
p. 252.
15
. See
American Yiddish Poetry,
p. 404.
16
. Sternberg, p. 225.
17
. Henry Roth,
Call It Sleep,
p. 16. All further page references will be cited in the text.
18
. See Hana Wirth-Nesher, “The Modern Jewish Novel and the City: Kafka, Roth, and Oz,”
Modern Fiction Studies
24 (1978): 91â110.
19
. Max Weinreich,
History of the Yiddish Language,
p. 270.
20
. Uriel Weinreich,
Languages in Contact,
p. 76.
21
. Bonnie Lyons,
Henry Roth: The Man and His Work
(New York, 1976), p. 172.
22
. Henry Roth,
Shifting Landscapes
(Philadelphia, 1987), p. 142.
I am grateful to David Roskies and Zephyra Porat for their excellent suggestions during revisions of this essay.
CALL IT SLEEP
. Copyright © 1934, copyright renewed 1962 by Henry Roth. Introduction copyright © 1991 by Alfred Kazin. Afterword copyright © 1990 by The John Hopkins University Press. All rights reserved. For information, address Picador, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10010.
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Prooftexts 10
(1990): 297â312, reprinted by permission of the author and The Johns Hopkins University Press.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Roth, Henry.
Call it sleep / Henry Roth ; with a new introduction by Alfred Kazin.
p. cm.
ISBN 0-312-42412-4
EAN 978-0-312-42412-1
I. Title.
PS3535.0787C34Â Â 1991
813'.52âdc20
91-21130
This edition first published in the United States by Farrar, Straus and Giroux
eISBN 9781466855281
First eBook edition: September 2013