Your Online English Bookstore in Israel

40.00 NIS

SKU: 9780199600724

Availability: 0

Guaranteed safe checkout

amazon paymentsapple paybitcoingoogle paypaypalvisa

Anthony Julius

In a book that Harold Bloom, in The New York Times Book Review , called a "strong, somber book on an appalling subject," Anthony Julius offers a wide-ranging and insightful history of anti-Semitism in England, the first such study of its kind. Julius focuses on four distinct versions of English anti-Semitism. He first describes the anti-Semitism of medieval England, a radical prejudice of defamation, expropriation, and murder, which culminated in 1290, the year Edward I expelled the Jews from England. The second strand is literary anti-Semitism, from the anonymous medieval ballad "Sir Hugh, or the Jew's Daughter," through Chaucer's "The Prioress's Tale" and Shakespeare's Merchant of Venice , to T. S. Eliot and beyond. The third is modern anti-Semitism, the commonplace anti-Semitism of insult and exclusion, running from the mid-17th century through to the late 20th century. The final chapters then deal with contemporary anti-Semitism, emerging in the late 1960s and the 1970s, which
treats Zionism and the State of Israel as illegitimate Jewish enterprises.

June 18, 2012 by Oxford University Press

Tags: 2012, All Products, Anthony Julius, Contemporary, History

Translation missing: en.general.search.loading