Research Catalog

Anti-semitic stereotypes : a paradigm of otherness in English popular culture, 1660-1830

Title
Anti-semitic stereotypes : a paradigm of otherness in English popular culture, 1660-1830 / Frank Felsenstein.
Author
Felsenstein, Frank.
Publication
Baltimore : Johns Hopkins University Press, 1995.

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TextRequest in advance PR151.J5 F4 1995Off-site

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Description
xvii, 350 pages : illustrations; 24 cm.
Summary
  • "The Jew of the eighteenth-century imagination," writes Frank Felsenstein, "threatens to overturn and confound the fabric of the social order ... He is the perpetual outsider whose unsettling presence serves to define the bounds that separate the native Englishman from the alien Other. But his alterity is not confined to his imaginative representation.
  • In law, the Jew and the infidel are deemed (according to the famous seventeenth-century jurist Lord Coke) 'perpetui inimici, perpetual enemies ..., for between them, as with the devils, whose subjects they be, and the Christian there is a perpetual hostility, and can be no peace.'".
  • In Anti-Semitic Stereotypes Felsenstein focuses on English cultural attitudes toward Jews during what is known as the "longer" eighteenth century, from roughly 1660 through 1830. He describes the persistence through the period of certain negative biases that, in many cases, can be traced back at least to the late Middle Ages.
  • Felsenstein finds evidence of these biases in a wide range of primary sources - chapbooks, ephemeral pamphlets, tracts, jets books, prints, folklore, proverbial expressions, and so on, as well as in the products of higher culture. With the advent of the nineteenth century, however, he sees a gradual development of more liberal attitudes in English society, "inchmeal evidence of the loosening hold upon the collective imagination of medieval beliefs concerning the Jews."
Series Statement
Johns Hopkins Jewish studies
Uniform Title
Johns Hopkins Jewish studies.
Subjects
Bibliography (note)
  • Includes bibliographical references (p. [319]-337) and index.
Contents
1. Stereotypes -- 2. Jews and Devils -- 3. Following Readmission: Evolving Stereotypes -- 4. Wandering Jew, Vagabond Jews -- 5. Conversion -- 6. Ceremonies -- 7. "Ev'ry child hates Shylock" -- 8. The Jew Bill -- 9. Toward Emancipation.
ISBN
  • 0801849039 (alk. paper)
  • 0801861799 (pbk.)
LCCN
94022411
OCLC
ocm30738404
Owning Institutions
Columbia University Libraries