The German-speaking region was essential for the development of modern
antisemitism. While many forms of medieval persecution of Jews existed all over
Europe, the Protestant reformation in Central Europe, contributed greatly to
the proliferation and adaptation of medieval anti-Jewish sentiments into the
early modern era. During the Enlightenment and the romantic period, the first
major steps towards modernizing anti-Jewish sentiments happened. The class will
address important social (middle-class), political (parties), intellectual
(race theory) as well as cultural (visual culture) dimensions of the modern
antisemitism, primarily during the 19th and early 20th
century. Since the 18th century, Jewish Activists and intellectuals
engaged in fighting antisemitism which the class will also address. The
specific form of Nazi antisemitism will be discussed in its relation to the
comprehensive discriminatory policy of the Nazi regime and, later on, the
extermination policy during the Holocaust. With the almost complete
annihilation of European Jewry, the history of modern antisemitism did not end,
but, instead, it caused further fundamental changes in its structure. The final
meetings will be devoted to these changes after 1945 and in the contemporary
German-speaking world. While the class will insist on studying the specifically
German-speaking forms of anti-Judaism and antisemitism, it will also place the
‘German case’ into the wider European context.
The lecture will be held by Professor Dr. Uffa Jensen.
- Trainer/in: Uffa Jensen