The Stage as a Temporary Home: On Dzigan and
Shumacher's Theater (1927-1980) has been designated as the winner of the prestigious Shapiro Award for 2019 for the best book in Israel Studies
The Stage as a Temporary Home takes us through the fascinating stages in the life and career of the duo Shimen Dzigan and
The book is based on rare recordings, transcriptions, programs, personal diaries, letters, photographs, oral testimonies, and critical articles, all of which come together to create the first critical portrait of this extraordinary duo. The book also examines their art, the connection between theater and politics, and the complex relationship between majority culture and minority language.
The study includes several valuable indexes: of titles of programs and plays, of the artists who participated in them, of writers and the drafts they wrote, of actors and the programs in which they participated, and a general name index. The book also includes a facsimile of the manuscript Der Nayer Dybbuk [The New Dybbuk].
Click here for the English edition, published by De Gruyter in collaboration with Magnes Press
Rotman in an interview with Sholem Beinfeld, The Yiddish Voice, March 2022
Rotman in an interview with Avrom Lichtenbaum, YIWO Radio, March 2021
The Yiddish Daily Forward, Mihail Krutikov, April 2021, review of English edition, published by De Gruyter in collaboration with Magnes Press
"I have decided to write about one of the most interesting chapters in the history of Yiddish theatre, a duo that was able to develop a critical practice that has no precedent in Yiddish and Israeli theatre. My grandfather used to listen to Dzigan and Shumacher’s recorded performances and laugh, but I didn’t understand what was so funny. It took me many years to share and appreciate my grandfather’s laughter." - Rotman in an interview with Vassili Schedrin, The Theatre Times, September 2020
"Rotman has written a masterfully crafted, definitive account of these major figures which will appeal to readers interested in twentieth-century Yiddish comedy and the politics of culture in Israel." - East European Jewish Affairs, Adi Mahalel, December 2019
"[...] The Stage as a Temporary Home explores a nearly forgotten culture that significantly impacted early Israeli society and politics. Rotman provides the Hebrew reader with a window on the Yiddish theater and humor scene in Poland and Russia prior to World War II and into the early 1940s. The tension between traditional Jewish life and urban modernity is skillfully addressed. While the first part of the book is largely historical, the second part analyzes the clash between Dzigan and Shumacher’s theater and Israeli audiences in the 1950s and 1960s." - Israel Studies Review 34, Raphael Cohen Almagor, Tamar Hermann, Hanna Herzog, Sam Lehman-Wilzig, and
Ruvi Ziegler, September 2019
Humor Mekuvan - Academic Online Journal of Humor
Research 11, Arieh Sover, December 2018
Haaretz, Michal Zamir, July 2018
Haaretz, Hagai Hitron, June 2018
Haaretz, Avraham Balaban, June 2018
Haaretz, Yaad Biran, March 2018
"Shimen Dzigan and Yisroel Schumacher were the most famous Yiddish comedians alive. Born and raised in Lodz they survived the war in Russia and eventually settled in Israel fighting for the rights of Yiddish. Diego Rotman from the Hebrew University tells their amazing life story in his book The Stage as a Temporary Home: On Dzigan and
Radio 104.5, Gabi Zohar interviewing Diego Rotman, February 2018
The Yiddish Daily Forward, "Diego Rotman Describes the Art of Dzigan and