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18:00 Uhr
Chicago's German-Jewish Labor History, from Haymarket to the 1910 Garment Workers' Strike
Talk|with Ben Schacht and Matthew Schlerf
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Goethe-Institut Chicago, Chicago, IL
- Sprache Englisch
- Preis Die Veranstaltung ist kostenlos und für alle zugänglich. Bitte melden Sie sich im Voraus an und bringen Sie zum Einchecken einen Ausweis mit Foto mit
Celebrate Labor History Month with us this May with this presentation by Ben Schacht and Matthew Schlerf on their research into German-Jewish labor relations in Chicago at the turn of the twentieth century.
This presentation will provide context for their summer 2026 walking tours about Chicago's German-Jewish labor history, produced by Chicago Shpatz with support from the Goethe-Institut Chicago. Their guided tour of Randolph Street will use methods of street theater and historical reenactment to illustrate how Jewish immigrants and activists moved from the background of the 1886 Haymarket Affair to the foreground of the 1910 Chicago Garment Strike. Topics covered will include the political and industrial revolutions of 1848, German and Jewish immigration to Chicago, the Civil War and the Great Chicago Fire, the use of Turnverein (or Turner Halls) and Hull-House as hubs for social activism, Chicago's German and Yiddish press, the eight-hour day movement, and the class divide (and subsequent historical biases) between machers and shnorrers in Chicago's early Jewish community.
This program is presented in partnership with the Chicago YIVO Society, the Chicago Jewish Historical Society, and the Illinois Labor History Society.
Please register in advance and bring a state- or federally-issued photo ID for check-in in the 150 N. Michigan building lobby. Light refreshments will be served.
ABOUT THE SPEAKERS
Ben Schacht is a writer, educator, and board member of the Chicago YIVO Society. He holds a PhD in comparative literature from Northwestern University.
Matthew Schlerf is a performer, tour guide, and community organizer. He holds an MFA in collaborative theatre making from Rose Bruford College in London. This July, Ben and Matthew will co-teach an adult education course at the Newberry Library titled "A Social History of Yiddish Chicago" (details forthcoming).
Chicago Shpatz is an experimental theater collective created by artists Matthew Schlerf and Sivan Spector. The word shpatz is a Yiddish pun based on the words shpatzir (“stroll”) and shpas (“joke”). Chicago Shpatz specializes in immersive, site-specific and environmental theater, blurring the lines between tour guide and storyteller, and bringing the history of Chicago and its peoples out of the archives and into the public. For queries or information about upcoming tours, reach out to chicagoshpatz@gmail.com.
This presentation will provide context for their summer 2026 walking tours about Chicago's German-Jewish labor history, produced by Chicago Shpatz with support from the Goethe-Institut Chicago. Their guided tour of Randolph Street will use methods of street theater and historical reenactment to illustrate how Jewish immigrants and activists moved from the background of the 1886 Haymarket Affair to the foreground of the 1910 Chicago Garment Strike. Topics covered will include the political and industrial revolutions of 1848, German and Jewish immigration to Chicago, the Civil War and the Great Chicago Fire, the use of Turnverein (or Turner Halls) and Hull-House as hubs for social activism, Chicago's German and Yiddish press, the eight-hour day movement, and the class divide (and subsequent historical biases) between machers and shnorrers in Chicago's early Jewish community.
This program is presented in partnership with the Chicago YIVO Society, the Chicago Jewish Historical Society, and the Illinois Labor History Society.
Please register in advance and bring a state- or federally-issued photo ID for check-in in the 150 N. Michigan building lobby. Light refreshments will be served.
ABOUT THE SPEAKERS
Ben Schacht is a writer, educator, and board member of the Chicago YIVO Society. He holds a PhD in comparative literature from Northwestern University.
Matthew Schlerf is a performer, tour guide, and community organizer. He holds an MFA in collaborative theatre making from Rose Bruford College in London. This July, Ben and Matthew will co-teach an adult education course at the Newberry Library titled "A Social History of Yiddish Chicago" (details forthcoming).
Chicago Shpatz is an experimental theater collective created by artists Matthew Schlerf and Sivan Spector. The word shpatz is a Yiddish pun based on the words shpatzir (“stroll”) and shpas (“joke”). Chicago Shpatz specializes in immersive, site-specific and environmental theater, blurring the lines between tour guide and storyteller, and bringing the history of Chicago and its peoples out of the archives and into the public. For queries or information about upcoming tours, reach out to chicagoshpatz@gmail.com.
Ort
Goethe-Institut Chicago
150 N Michigan Ave
Suite 420
Chicago, IL 60601
USA
150 N Michigan Ave
Suite 420
Chicago, IL 60601
USA
Ort
Goethe-Institut Chicago
150 N Michigan Ave
Suite 420
Chicago, IL 60601
USA
150 N Michigan Ave
Suite 420
Chicago, IL 60601
USA