ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1990, this book focuses on the challenge to Jewish identity posed by the conflicting forces of enlightenment, emancipation, modern political antisemitism, and secular ideologies like Zionism, nationalism, and socialism. At the heart of his discussion stands the intense, tortured, and ultimately tragic encounter of Jews with Germans and Austrians. He also deals at length with the new problems of Jewish cultural and political identity posed by the existence of the state of Israel and its embattled position among the nations. In the course of the analysis the book looks at the tragedy of assimilation in central Europe, with the optimistic dream of Enlightenment and Bildung coming to a climax in the nightmare of racial antisemitism and the Holocaust. He explores the ambivalent relationship of the Jews with the European Left, showing how many Jewish intellectuals found a new political home in radical and socialist movements, though these movements often retained negative stereotypes of Jews and Judaism and exhibited a fierce opposition to the maintenance of any separate Jewish identity. The role of Zionism is discussed and the more recent challenges to its legitimacy examined.

chapter |5 pages

Introduction

part 1|62 pages

Nemesis in Central Europe

chapter 1|8 pages

Karl Marx and the Enlightenment

chapter 2|14 pages

The internationalism of Rosa Luxemburg

chapter 3|12 pages

Antisemitism as a radical ideology

chapter 4|12 pages

Karl Lueger in historical perspective

part 2|62 pages

Culture, Marginality, and Identity

chapter 6|15 pages

The Jewishness of Sigmund Freud 1

chapter 7|16 pages

Dilemmas of assimilation in central Europe

chapter 8|5 pages

Walter Benjamin: a borderline tragedy

chapter 9|14 pages

The strange case of Bruno Kreisky

chapter 10|10 pages

The Fassbinder controversy

part 3|62 pages

Jews, the Left, and Zionism

chapter 11|17 pages

French socialism and the Dreyfus affair

chapter 12|5 pages

A Parisian patricide

chapter 13|5 pages

The ghost of Leon Trotsky

chapter 14|11 pages

Vladimir Jabotinsky – a reassessment

chapter 15|10 pages

Between prophecy and politics

chapter 16|12 pages

Zionism as a Jewish revolution

part 4|72 pages

From Antisemitism to Anti-Zionism

chapter 17|11 pages

Antisemitism and the origins of Zionism

chapter 18|8 pages

The myth of the Jew in contemporary France

chapter 19|11 pages

Global anti-Zionism in the 1980s*

chapter 20|11 pages

The new war against the Jews

chapter 21|6 pages

Under the sign of glasnost

chapter 22|4 pages

The politics of perdition

chapter 23|8 pages

Soundings in the Gulf

chapter 24|11 pages

The fundamentalist challenge