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  • 1
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2021
    Titel der Quelle: The European Left and the Jewish Question, 1848-1992
    Angaben zur Quelle: (2021) 229-242
    Keywords: Partito comunista italiano ; Anti-Zionism History ; Antisemitism History 20th century ; Cold War Influence
    Abstract: Reflecting on the relationship between Jews and the Left during her time, French scholar of communism Annie Kriegel emphasized the need to discern two fundamental issues: the Jewish question on the Left and the position of Jewish people within the Left. We can apply this perspective also to the communist milieu, noting, however, the persistence within that world of an organizational model based on the iron moral discipline of its followers, on the individual internalization of the party’s primacy, and on its indissoluble political and ideological unity.
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  • 2
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2021
    Titel der Quelle: The European Left and the Jewish Question, 1848-1992
    Angaben zur Quelle: (2021) 157-174
    Keywords: Right and left (Political science) ; Antisemitism History 1945- ; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Influence ; Frankfurt school of sociology
    Abstract: The previous contributions have examined the discussion of the European Left on antisemitism. This contribution furthers the analyses by looking at the interpretation of the Shoah in the works of left-wing writers from the end of the Second World War until the beginning of the Seventies. The paper is divided into four parts. The first one introduces the main political parties of the Italian left, their political culture, and their relationship with the highly educated classes in the decades taken into consideration. The second one deals with how several influential writers interpreted antisemitism and the Shoah from 1945 to the end of the Fifties, while the third section explores the turn occurred in the following decade. Finally, the fourth part presents some concluding remarks on the contribution of the Frankfurt School and how it crucially influenced the ideas of Italian intellectuals, especially from the second half of the Sixties.
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  • 3
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2021
    Titel der Quelle: The European Left and the Jewish Question, 1848-1992
    Angaben zur Quelle: (2021) 67-80
    Keywords: Lazare, Bernard, ; Lazare, Bernard, Philosophy ; Jewish anarchists Biography ; Jewish socialists History 19th century ; Antisemitism Philosophy
    Abstract: The focus of this essay is on Bernard Lazare as one of the first authors to speak of antisemitism as a movement that, despite the emancipatory laws, was seriously spreading not only in France, but also in other European countries and in North Africa, especially Algeria. The aim of this article is to focus the attention on the role of Lazare as the first Jewish intellectual who was aware of the danger for the Jews, and studied the phenomenon to understand it and contain it. The stress is on the origin and development of the analysis of the issue in young Lazare, to provide a clear indication of how the author himself still needed time to deal with some of the features that antisemitism was assuming, especially outside France.
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  • 4
    Article
    Article
    In:  The European Left and the Jewish Question, 1848-1992 (2021) 81-94
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2021
    Titel der Quelle: The European Left and the Jewish Question, 1848-1992
    Angaben zur Quelle: (2021) 81-94
    Keywords: Marr, Wilhelm, Political and social views ; Antisemitism History 19th century ; Antisemitism Philosophy ; Racism History 19th century ; Socialists Biography
    Abstract: The birth of modern antisemitism in Germany is often associated with journalist Wilhelm Marr, whose life stretched through both the upheavals of 1848 and the birth of the German Empire. Marr does not occupy an important place a priori in the antisemitic movement, unlike pastor Adolf Stoecker, nationalist Heinrich von Treitscke, or Houston Stewart Chamberlain. However, because of his fame, the study of his life and impact in German society makes it possible to better understand the modes of dissemination of antisemitism, and to better measure its originality. Although he is credited with coining the concept of antisemitism, a point we will examine later on, Marr’s career has interested only one biographer, Moshe Zimmermann, who published a work entitled Wilhelm Marr The Patriarch of Antisemitism. Born in Magdeburg in 1819 to an actor father, who then became director of a Hamburg theater, nothing in Marr’s itinerary predicted his notoriety or originality. Politically speaking, he was on the left side of the spectrum, and he did his ideological apprenticeship in Switzerland, a refuge for Europeans who were being persecuted for their political commitment. Marr was introduced by Julius Fröbel, a member of the Radical Party and director of the newspaper Der schweizerische Republikaner (The Swiss Republican), and his circle, and to poet Georg Herwegh, who also belonged to this radical fraction. Under the influence of Wilhem Weitling, the first German theorist of communism, who had moved to Zurich in the spring of 1843, Marr became a communist in connection with utopian socialism. After six weeks in Switzerland, Marr was expelled from Zurich because of his political activities. He then moved to Lausanne, where he established contacts with the Young Germany (Jungedeutschland). This radical movement of the first half of the nineteenth century advocated for democracy, the constitutional state, and emancipation. In the spring of 1843, Marr joined the Young German Confederation of Lake Geneva, founded in Switzerland by socialists Hermann Döleke and Jules Standau. It is around this time that he became an atheist and an anarchist, and began his career as a journalist and editor. After being deported several times from Switzerland and Germany, he moved to Hamburg in 1845, where he was when the 1848 revolution broke out. His expulsion from Switzerland in 1845 was motivated more by his atheism than by his political activities.
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  • 5
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2021
    Titel der Quelle: The European Left and the Jewish Question, 1848-1992
    Angaben zur Quelle: (2021) 53-66
    Keywords: Lombroso, Cesare, Influence ; Lombroso, Cesare, Political and social views ; Ferri, Enrico, Political and social views ; Antisemitism History 19th century ; Socialism History 19th century ; Socialism Philosophy 19th century ; History ; Zionism Public opinion
    Abstract: This chapter discusses antisemitism in the works of positivist scientist and father of criminal anthropology Cesare Lombroso (1835–1909), and in the writing of authors close to him who took part in what has been defined the «Lombroso system». While the matter has been partly studied in several articles and works, I will highlight certain aspects of the connection between the Lombrosian conception of socialism and his analysis of antisemitism. The chronological link between the birth of socialism and the emergence of «modern» antisemitism was emphasised, in fact, by Lombroso’s principal disciple Enrico Ferri (1856–1929), when he remarked in 1893 that antisemitism represented a «form of social psychopathology, which over a short number of years had turned to violence that has no comparable occurrences within the contemporary world, but for the exception of the progress of Socialism». Like Lombroso, Ferri joined the Socialist Party of Italian Workers in 1893, the same year it was funded. In 1894, on the eve of the Dreyfus Affair, Lombroso published an analysis of the causes and nature of antisemitism, entitled Antisemitism and Modern Science, and that was translated into French in 1899.
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  • 6
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2021
    Titel der Quelle: The European Left and the Jewish Question, 1848-1992
    Angaben zur Quelle: (2021) 125-136
    Keywords: Gramsci, Antonio, Criticism and interpretation ; Gramsci, Antonio, Political and social views ; Schucht, Tatiana ; Sraffa, Piero ; Antisemitism History 20th century ; Jewish question History 20th century ; Communism Philosophy ; History
    Abstract: The aim of this chapter is to investigate Antonio Gramsci’s interest in the so-called “Jewish question”, and more specifically to explore whether the founder of what would become the biggest Communist Party in the West, had reflected on the topic beyond the epistolary comments he exchanged with Tatiana Schucht and Pietro Sraffa.
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  • 7
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2021
    Titel der Quelle: The European Left and the Jewish Question, 1848-1992
    Angaben zur Quelle: (2021) 211-220
    Keywords: Cases, Cesare ; Arab-Israeli conflict Foreign public opinion, Italian ; Anti-Zionism, Jewish ; Jews Biography
    Abstract: Reminiscing about the post-war atmosphere, Cesare Cases—who was born in Milan in 1920 and died in Florence in 2005—wrote: “For those who felt uneasy and did not easily recover from the trauma [of anti-Jewish persecutions], the alternative was between left-wing parties and Zionism”. This sort of autobiographical, ideal and partly ideological triangle—trauma, Zionism and left-wing parties—profoundly influenced Cases’ life.
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  • 8
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2021
    Titel der Quelle: The European Left and the Jewish Question, 1848-1992
    Angaben zur Quelle: (2021) 283-299
    Keywords: Left-wing extremists History ; Six Day War, 1967 Influence ; Anti-Zionism History ; Antisemitism History 20th century ; Arab-Israeli conflict Influence ; Arab-Israeli conflict Case studies Public opinion
    Abstract: The paper analyses the anti-Zionist activism of the French radical Left through the demonstrations and violence that were perpetrated by the extreme Left in France in the 1960s and 1970s. Trotskyist and Maoist movements, such as the Ligue Communiste and the Gauche Prolétarienne, played an important role on the redefinition of the figure of the Jews in the Left in France. The Arab-Israeli conflict helped them build the image of Israeli soldiers and the State of Israel as an enemy to be fought both in the Middle East and on French soil. Such a representation of Israel and the Jews was shared by another part of the French Left in the 1960s and 1970s, the Christian Left, close to the newspaper Témoignage Chrétien and the “second left” like the PSU (Parti Socialiste Unifié). These groups took the side of the Palestinians, and portrayed them as martyrs of the Jews. The Christian Left also supported anti-Zionist actions, and Zionism was perceived as a new form of colonialism (following the seminal article of French orientalist Maxime Rodinson “Israël, fait colonial?” published in 1967).
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  • 9
    Article
    Article
    In:  The European Left and the Jewish Question, 1848-1992 (2021) 13-26
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2021
    Titel der Quelle: The European Left and the Jewish Question, 1848-1992
    Angaben zur Quelle: (2021) 13-26
    Keywords: Jews Political activity ; Antisemitism History ; Socialism History
    Abstract: A significant amount of literature exists on the history of socialism in France, from its origins in the nineteenth century until today. During this period, a large number of Jews became involved with the socialist movement, intended in the broader sense of the term. The first country in the world to emancipate Jewish people in 1791, France was emulated by many other European countries in the nineteenth century. Despite this, antisemitism had a new resurgence in Germany, Austria, France and Russia from the 1880s. However, France was a pioneer in matters of the emancipation of the Jews, and as a consequence, many of them were grateful and identified with the values of progress and universalism defended by the Second Republic and, even more so, by the Third. Nevertheless, it is important to remember that out of 39 million people, in France there were only 80,000 Jews, two thousandths of the population, making the French Jewish community one of the smallest in the big European countries of the 1880s.
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  • 10
    Article
    Article
    In:  The European Left and the Jewish Question, 1848-1992 (2021) 95-109
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2021
    Titel der Quelle: The European Left and the Jewish Question, 1848-1992
    Angaben zur Quelle: (2021) 95-109
    Keywords: Sorel, Georges, Criticism and interpretation ; Socialism History 19th century ; Jewish question History 19th century ; Antisemitism History 19th century
    Abstract: This chapter outlines the key elements of a research project on Georges Sorel’s ideas on the Jewish question, to evaluate how the author, between changes and revisions, approached the topic as a whole.
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