ABSTRACT

This book examines the history of antisemitism in the United States and Germany in a novel way by placing the two countries side by side for a sustained comparison of the anti-Jewish environments in both countries from the 1880s to the end of World War II.

Author Richard E. Frankel shatters the widely held notion of exceptionalism in Germany and America: the belief that antisemitism in Germany was uniquely murderous and led inevitably to the Holocaust and that antisemitism in the United States was uniquely benign, making an American Holocaust all but unthinkable. In a series of new and previously published essays that have been revised, updated, and expanded, the book relates antisemitism to issues including Jewish and Chinese immigration, discrimination and exclusion, World War I and its aftermath, Hitler and Henry Ford, Nazis, the American Right, and the Roosevelt Administration, and a German Ku Klux Klan. Taken together, these essays reveal that antisemitism in Germany was less aberrant than commonly believed and that American antisemitism was indeed dangerous and more similar to what existed in Germany during the same period.

Antisemitism Before the Holocaust is an essential volume for students and scholars alike interested in European and American history, the history of the Holocaust and World War I.

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|22 pages

A Transnational Jewish Question

Exploring Antisemitism in the United States and Germany Through the Lens of Global History, 1880–1914

chapter 2|11 pages

“No Jews, Dogs, or Consumptives”

Comparing Anti-Jewish Discrimination in Late-Nineteenth-Century Germany and the United States

chapter 4|10 pages

The Paranoid Style in Antisemitic Journalism

Comparing Coverage of the “World Jewish Conspiracy” in the Völkischer Beobachter and the Dearborn Independent, 1920–1923

chapter 6|13 pages

Klansmen in the Fatherland

A Transnational Episode in the History of Weimar Germany's Right-Wing Political Culture