1st Edition

Mapping the New Left Antisemitism The Fathom Essays

Edited By Alan Johnson Copyright 2024
352 Pages
by Routledge

352 Pages
by Routledge

352 Pages
by Routledge

Mapping the New Left Antisemitism: The Fathom Essays provides a comprehensive guide to contemporary Left antisemitism. The rise of a new and largely left-wing form of antisemitism in the era of the Jewish state and the distinction between it and legitimate criticism of Israel are now roiling progressive politics in the West and causing alarming spikes in antisemitic incitement and incidents.... Read more

Preface: The Critique of the Critique by David Hirsh, Series Editor  

Part 1: Introduction and Contexts  

1. Introduction to Mapping the New Left Antisemitism: The Fathom Essays  

 Alan Johnson

2. A New Form of the Oldest Hatred: Mapping Antisemitism Today  

Lesley Klaff  

3. The Jewish Experience of Antisemitism  

Dave Rich  

4. The Left and the Jews: Time for a Rethink  

Alan Johnson   

Part 2: Contemporary Left Antisemitism  

5. What is Left Antisemitism?  

Sean Matgamna  

6. Anti-Zionism and Anti-Semitism  

Michael Walzer  

7. Alibi Antisemitism  

Norman Geras  

8. Like a Cloud Contains a Storm: Jean Améry’s Critique of Anti-Zionism  

Marlene Gallner  

9. What Corbyn’s Favourite Sociologists Greg Philo and Mike Berry Get Wrong about Contemporary Antisemitism  

Matthew Bolton  

10. Antisemitism and the Left: A Memoir  

Kathleen Hayes  

11. Denial: Norman Finkelstein and the New Antisemitism  

Alan Johnson  

12. ‘Toxic Gifts’: Israel and the Anti-Zionist Left. An interview With Susie Linfield  

Susie Linfield  

Part 3: The Soviet Roots of Contemporary Left Antisemitism  

13. Soviet Anti-Zionism and Contemporary Left Antisemitism  

Izabella Tabarovsky  

14. Communists Against Jews: The Anti-Zionist Campaign in Poland in 1968  

Simon Gansinger  

15. The German Left’s Undeclared Wars on Israel. An Interview with Jeffrey Herf  

Jeffrey Herf  

Part 4: Left Antisemitism and the Holocaust  

16. Holocaust Inversion and Contemporary Antisemitism  

Lesley Klaff  

17. Hitler and the Nazis’ Anti-Zionism  

Jeffrey Herf  

18. Holocaust Falsifiers: Blaming ‘Zionists’ for the Crimes of the Nazis  

Paul Bogdanor  

Part 5: Left Antisemitism in Europe and the United States  

19. Reflections on Contemporary Antisemitism in Europe  

Kenneth Waltzer  

20. The Unwelcome Arrival of the Quenelle  

Dave Rich  

21. A Modern Orthodox-Christian Ritual Murder Libel: St. Philoumenos of Jacob’s Well  

David Gurevich   

22. We Shall Be as a City on a Hill: Trump, ‘Progressive’ Antisemitism, and the Loss of American Jewish Exceptionalism  

Shalom Lappin  

Part 6: Left Antisemitism and Academia  

23. The Meaning of David Miller  

David Hirsh  

24. From Scholarship to Polemic? A Case Study of the Emerging Crisis in Academic Publishing on Israel  

Cary Nelson  

25. Pathologising ‘Jewish Being and Thinking’: Oren Ben-Dor and Academic Antisemitism  

Sarah Annes Brown  

Part 7: The International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance  

26. On Misrepresentations of the IHRA Definition of Antisemitism  

Dave Rich  

27. Political Antisemitism: A Defence of the IHRA Definition  

Bernard Harrison and Lesley Klaff  

Part 8: Theory and Left Antisemitism  

28. Misreading Hannah Arendt: Judith Butler’s Anti-Zionism and the Eichmann Trial  

Russell A. Berman  

29. The Pleasures of Antisemitism  

Eve Garrard  

30. Intersectionality and Antisemitism: A New Approach  

Karin Stögner  

31. Left Alternatives to Left Antisemitism: A Conversation Between Alan Johnson and Philip Spencer  

Alan Johnson and Philip Spencer  

Biography

Alan Johnson is the founder and editor of Fathom journal. A professor of democratic theory and practice, he has served on the editorial boards of Socialist Organiser, Historical Materialism and the US socialist journals New Politics and Dissent. His writings on the left, and on antisemitism, include ‘Aurum de Stercore: anti-totalitarianism in the thought of Primo Levi’, in Thinking Towards Humanity. Themes From Norman Geras, edited by Stephen De Wijze and Eve Garrard (2012), and the report Institutionally Antisemitic: Contemporary Left Antisemitism and the Crisis in the British Labour Party (2019).

‘Antisemitism has often presented itself as a satisfactory explanation for what is wrong with the world, and repeatedly offered tragic recipes for how to improve that world. Do our moral and political ideals today reproduce past prejudice and projection? We cannot know without reflection, and it is difficult to imagine a better stimulus to reflection than the essays gathered in this informative, wide-ranging, and important volume’.

David Nirenbergauthor of Anti-Judaism: The Western Tradition

‘This is an indispensable volume on an unignorable subject’.

Anthony Juliusauthor of Trials of the Diaspora: The History of Anti-Semitism in England

‘Written by many of this generation’s leading scholars, Mapping the New Left Antisemitism: The Fathom Essays is a valuable compilation of learned, deeply insightful analyses of contemporary anti-Jewish hostility prevalent in significant strains of western political thought. An eye-opening, much-needed collection, it offers critically important reflections on a phenomenon too often overlooked or denied: the pernicious links between “anti-Zionism” and antisemitism within the political left’.

Alvin RosenfeldProfessor of English and Jewish Studies and Irving M. Glazer Chair, Jewish Studies Director, Center for the Study of Contemporary Antisemitism, Indiana University at Bloomington, USA 

Fathom has played an invaluable role challenging some dangerous myths concerning Jews and Zionism that have corrupted parts of the left. This wide-ranging collection will compel anyone concerned with a future left to worry about intellectually and historically simplistic formulas’.

Mitchell Cohen, Professor of Political Science at Baruch College of the City University of New York and the CUNY Graduate Center. 1991-2009 co-editor of Dissent, one of the United States' leading intellectual quarterlies, now an Editor Emeritus

Mapping the New Left Antisemitism is essential reading for anyone interested in one of the most destructive ideologies of the 21st century. It includes essays by some of the most pertinent scholars on antisemitism from the political left and makes the case for the urgency of combating antisemitism in its most modern forms’.

Gunther Jikeli, Erna B. Rosenfeld Professor in Jewish Studies and Associate Director at the Institute for the Study of Contemporary Antisemitism, Indiana University Bloomington, USA

‘This collection of essays on contemporary left antisemitism showcases the best qualities of Alan Johnson’s Fathom, which focuses relentlessly on the heart of the problem of how people relate to Israel. People who consider themselves to be well-informed and anti-racist are too often confused about the facts and prone to stumbling into antisemitic ways of thinking. Johnson is attentive to the temptation to use an invented notion of Jews or Zionism to make sense of a frightening world. He educates about the situation and provides a platform (through Fathom) for smart people writing from diverse viewpoints’.

Rosa Freedman, inaugural Professor of Law, Conflict and Global Development at the University of Reading, and a Research Fellow at The London Centre for the Study of Contemporary Antisemitism, UK

‘In 10 years Fathom has already published half a century's worth of critically important essays and reviews’.

Michael WalzerProfessor (Emeritus) of Social Science at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, NJ; author of Just and Unjust Wars (1977), among other books; former co-editor of Dissent magazine for twenty years