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Antisemitism and the Politics of History: The Tauber Institute Series for the Study of European Jewry

Editat de Scott Ury, Guy Miron
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 30 noi 2023
This groundbreaking anthology addresses the history and challenges of using “antisemitism” and related terms as tools for historical analysis and public discourse. Drawing together seventeen chapters by prominent scholars from Europe, Israel, and the United States, the volume encourages readers to rethink assumptions regarding the nature and meaning of Jewish history and the history of relations between Jews and non-Jews.

The book begins with a revised and updated version of David Engel’s seminal essay “Away from a Definition of Antisemitism.” Subsequent contributions by renowned specialists in ancient, medieval, and modern history, religious studies, and other fields explore the various and changing definitions and uses of the term “antisemitism” in a range of contexts, including ancient Rome and Greece, the Byzantine Empire, medieval Europe, early modern and modern Europe, North America, and the United Kingdom. The volume also includes a section that focuses on the Second World War, including the Holocaust and its memory. Engel offers a contemporary response to conclude the book.

First published in Hebrew in 2020 as a special issue of the journal Zion: A Quarterly for Research in Jewish History in cooperation with the Zalman Shazar Center in Jerusalem, this compelling collection has already had an impact on the study of antisemitism in Israel. It is certain to become a critical resource for scholars, policymakers, and journalists researching antisemitism, Holocaust studies, and related fields.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781684581801
ISBN-10: 168458180X
Pagini: 300
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 30 mm
Greutate: 0.63 kg
Editura: Brandeis University Press
Colecția Brandeis University Press
Seria The Tauber Institute Series for the Study of European Jewry


Notă biografică

Scott Ury is associate professor in the Department of Jewish History and director of the Eva and Marc Besen Institute for the Study of Historical Consciousness at Tel Aviv University and senior editor of the journal History and Memory. He is the author of Barricades and Banners: The Revolution of 1905 and the Transformation of Warsaw Jewry. Guy Miron is professor of history and vice president for academic affairs at the Open University of Israel. He is the author and editor of The Waning of Emancipation: Jewish History, Memory, and the Rise of Fascism in Germany, France, and Hungary and Space and Time under Persecution: The German-Jewish Experience in the Third Reich.

Cuprins

Part I: INTRODUCTORY CONSIDERATIONS
1) Scott Ury and Guy Miron: Antisemitism: On the Meanings and Uses of a Contested Term
2) David Engel: Thinking about “Antisemitism”

Part II: METHODOLOGICAL EXPLORATIONS
3) Amos Morris-Reich: History and Noise
4) Susannah Heschel: Erotohistoriography: Sensory and Emotional Dimensions of Antisemitism
5) Stefanie Schüler-Springorum: Toward Entanglement

Part III: PREMODERN CONTEXTUALIZATIONS
6) Adi Ophir and Ishay Rosen-Zvi: Separatism, Judeophobia, and the Birth of the Goy: On the Chickens and the Egg
7) Youval Rotman: Antisemitism and Islamophobia: A Medieval Comparison
8) Tzafrir Barzilay: The Term “Antisemitism” as a Category for the Study of Medieval Jewish History

Part IV: MODERN CONTESTATIONS
9) Ofri Ilany: Feverish Preference: Philosemitism, Anti-antisemitism and Their Critics
10) Gershon Bacon: Cautious Use of the Term “Antisemitism” for Lack of an Alternative: Interwar Poland as a Case Study
11) Eli Lederhendler: America and the Keyword Battle Over “Antisemitism”
12) Arie M. Dubnov: “Fog in Channel – Continent Cut Off” Remarks on Antisemitism, Pride, and Prejudice in Britain
13) David Feldman: A Retreat from Universalism: Opposing and Defining Antisemitism and Islamophobia
in Britain, ca. 1990–2018

Part V: POST-HOLOCAUST RUMINATIONS
14) Havi Dreifuss: In Defense of the Concept of “Antisemitism” in Holocaust Studies
15) Amos Goldberg and Raz Segal: “Antisemitism” as a Question in Holocaust Studies
16) Karma Ben-Johanan: Is Christian Antisemitism Possible? A History of an Intra-Catholic Debate (1965–2000)

VI: CONCLUDING EXPLANATIONS
17) David Engel, Can the Circle Be Broken?

Recenzii

“Ury and Miron’s volume makes a stimulating and fair-minded contribution to historiographical, theoretical, and contemporary political discussions and debates about antisemitism as a historical phenomenon and analytical category. Each essay is illuminating in its own right and as part of the whole. A rare achievement!”

“What’s in a name? This volume analyzes and deconstructs the numerous meanings of the portmanteau ‘antisemitism,’ from adjective to tool, from history to political anthropology, since antiquity through the Holocaust to present-day America. The writers challenge our use of language and concepts as way of understanding the difficulties of connecting the word to concrete historical events.”

“A timely debate about meaning and intention in the application of a loaded term and an insightful reflection on the connection between historical events, feelings, and discourse.” 

Antisemitism and the Politics of History probes key ethical, political, methodological, and intellectual issues surrounding the study of antisemitism with chronological and disciplinary breadth. It seeks to answer thought-provoking questions and features established, prominent scholars alongside a new generation of researchers, thus offering a variety of voices grappling with fundamental assumptions concerning antisemitism as a concept and a historical phenomenon.”

Antisemitism and the Politics of History makes an essential contribution to rethinking ‘antisemitism.’ Launched by David Engel’s prod to scholars to avoid using the term ‘antisemitism’ since it often obscures more than it reveals, this set of essays interrogates the truisms, assumptions, and conventions widespread in both the academic study and popular understanding of antisemitism. Ranging across empirical analyses from the ancient world to the present, discussed alongside cutting-edge theory, a host of assumptions are interrogated so that readers are treated to new insights and new possibilities in how to think about how we think about ‘antisemitism.’”