HIST 2656

HIST 2656

Course information provided by the Courses of Study 2024-2025.

Why is it that the age of emancipation which saw most of the world's Jews gain citizenship status and achieve unprecedented levels of socio-economic modernization, also witnessed a catastrophic assault on Jewish life? How do we explain the conjunction between the spread of liberal values and the exponential rise of anti-semitism? Most historians refer to the virulence of racism in accounting for the scale and brutality of anti-Jewish rhetoric which prepared the way for the destruction of European Jewry in the twentieth century. But this explanation fails to account for the fact that progressive democratic discourse which explicitly endorses ethnic diversity and emphatically repudiates racial prejudice remains susceptible to anti-Jewish animus even now. In this class, we will examine the complex relationship between emancipation and anti-semitism from the perspective of those who benefited from the former but had to contend with the reality of the latter – Europe's rising class of Jewish intellectuals. We will discover that their insights into the problem of modern Jew-hatred were both acute and prescient and have much to teach us about the current Jewish predicament.

When Offered Spring.

Distribution Category (HST-AS, SCD-AS)
Course Subfield (HEU)

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Syllabi: none
  •   Regular Academic Session.  Combined with: JWST 2156RELST 2656

  • 3 Credits GradeNoAud

  • 18510 HIST 2656   LEC 001

    • MW
    • Jan 21 - May 6, 2025
    • Litvak, O

  • Instruction Mode: In Person