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Jews and the left the rise and fall of a political alliance

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: New York Palgrave 2014Description: xii,335p. 23 cmISBN:
  • 9781137008299
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 320.53089924 22 ME-J
LOC classification:
  • HX550.J4 M46 2014
Online resources:
Contents:
Machine generated contents note: -- Introduction -- 1. The Beginnings of the Jewish Attraction to the Left -- 2. Anti-Semitism and Support for Jewish Rights: an Analysis of Socialist Attitudes to the Jews -- 3. Socialism, Zionism and the State of Israel -- 4. From the Universalist to the Particular: Examining the Extent of Jewish Involvement in the Political Left -- 5. A Critical Analysis of the Myth of Judeo-Communism -- 6. The post-World War Two Decline of the Jewish/Left alliance: From the International to the National Solution -- 7. Exceptions to the Rule: the Continuing Prominence of Left-wing Jews in the Post-World War Two Period -- 8. Left-wing Jewish Critics of Zionism and Israel -- 9. Conclusion.
Summary: "The disproportionate historical contribution of Jews to the political Left has been well documented. It can in fact be argued that from approximately 1848 till 1970, an informal political alliance existed between Jews and the political Left. This was never an alliance of all Jews and all Left groups. But it was an alliance between key sections of the Left and key sections of politically active Jews at various times and in various places. Both partners to this alliance were motivated by a combination of pragmatic self-interest and idealism or altruism.Philip Mendes' work is the first publication to provide a systematic historical and political overview of the relationship between Jews and the Left. It argues that Jews were drawn to the Left by a range of structural and cultural influences including poverty and class oppression, anti-Semitic violence and discrimination, Jewish ethical teachings, and Left support for Jewish rights. Nevertheless, most Jews were never sympathetic to left-wing politics, and a significant number of Jews became victims of Communist regimes. Equally, the subsequent decline of Jewish involvement in the Left can be attributed to relatively objective factors such as the Holocaust and the creation of the State of Israel which transformed Jewish dependence from international to national forces"--
Item type: Print List(s) this item appears in: Global Library Recent Acquisitions July(First 2 weeks) 2015(List)
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Print Print OPJGU Sonepat- Campus General Books Main Library 320.53089924 ME-J (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 131057

Includes bibliographical references (pages 290-330) and index.

Machine generated contents note: -- Introduction -- 1. The Beginnings of the Jewish Attraction to the Left -- 2. Anti-Semitism and Support for Jewish Rights: an Analysis of Socialist Attitudes to the Jews -- 3. Socialism, Zionism and the State of Israel -- 4. From the Universalist to the Particular: Examining the Extent of Jewish Involvement in the Political Left -- 5. A Critical Analysis of the Myth of Judeo-Communism -- 6. The post-World War Two Decline of the Jewish/Left alliance: From the International to the National Solution -- 7. Exceptions to the Rule: the Continuing Prominence of Left-wing Jews in the Post-World War Two Period -- 8. Left-wing Jewish Critics of Zionism and Israel -- 9. Conclusion.

"The disproportionate historical contribution of Jews to the political Left has been well documented. It can in fact be argued that from approximately 1848 till 1970, an informal political alliance existed between Jews and the political Left. This was never an alliance of all Jews and all Left groups. But it was an alliance between key sections of the Left and key sections of politically active Jews at various times and in various places. Both partners to this alliance were motivated by a combination of pragmatic self-interest and idealism or altruism.Philip Mendes' work is the first publication to provide a systematic historical and political overview of the relationship between Jews and the Left. It argues that Jews were drawn to the Left by a range of structural and cultural influences including poverty and class oppression, anti-Semitic violence and discrimination, Jewish ethical teachings, and Left support for Jewish rights. Nevertheless, most Jews were never sympathetic to left-wing politics, and a significant number of Jews became victims of Communist regimes. Equally, the subsequent decline of Jewish involvement in the Left can be attributed to relatively objective factors such as the Holocaust and the creation of the State of Israel which transformed Jewish dependence from international to national forces"--

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