Three Faces of Antisemitism examines the three primary forms of antisemitism as they emerged in modern and contemporary Germany, and then in other countries.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Foreword for Jeffrey Herf's Three Faces of Antisemitism
David Hirsh
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Three Faces of Antisemitism
1 Reactionary Modernism, the Jews, and Anticapitalism in Weimar and Nazi Germany
2 The Jewish Enemy: Nazi Germany's Core Antisemitic Conspiracy Theory
3 Nazi Anti-Zionism
4 Nazi Propaganda Aimed at Arabs and Muslims during World War II and the Holocaust
5 The Importance and the Limits of Husseini's Influence in Nazi Berlin
6 East German Communists and the Jewish Question: In Memory of Sigrid Meushel (1944-2016) and for Anetta Kahane
7 East Germany from Antifascism to Undeclared Wars with Israel, 1967-1989
8 The West German Left and Israel, 1967-1977
9 Antisemitism and White Racism: Similarities and Differences
10 Antisemitic Conspiracies Yet Again: White Racism, Holocaust Denial, and Ideological Assaults on Israel
Essays on Antisemitism and Contemporary History Since September 11, 2001
11 What is Old and What is New in the Terrorism of Islamic Fundamentalism?
12 Why They Fight: Hamas' Too-Little-Known Fascist Charter
13 Is Donald Trump a Fascist?
14 Ideological Exceptionalism: Taking Iran's Antisemitism Seriously
15 Antisemitism and the Academy since 9/11
16 Conclusion: The Era of Simultaneity of Antisemitism's Three Faces
Selected Bibliography
Index