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Full Description
Hybrid Hate is the first book to study the conflation of anti-Semitism and anti-Black racism. As objects of racism, Jews and Blacks have been linked together for centuries as peoples apart from the general run of humanity. In this book, Tudor Parfitt investigates the development of anti-Semitism, anti-Black racism, and race theory in the West from the Renaissance to the Second World War.
Parfitt explains how Jews were often perceived as Black in medieval Europe, and the conflation of Jews and Blacks continued throughout the period of the Enlightenment. With the discovery of a community of Black Jews in Loango in West Africa in 1777, and later of Black Jews in India, the Middle East, and other parts of Africa, the notion of multiracial Jews was born. Over the following centuries, the figure of the hybrid Black Jew was drawn into the maelstrom of evolving theories about race hierarchies and taxonomies. Parfitt analyses how Jews and Blacks were increasingly conflated in a racist discourse from the mid-nineteenth century to the period of the Third Reich, as the two fundamental prejudices of the West were combined. Hybrid Hate offers a new interpretation of the rise of anti-Semitism and anti-Black racism in Europe, and casts light on contemporary racist discourses in the United States and Europe.
Contents
List of Illustrations
Prologue
Chapter 1: 'The Truth of the Origination of the World and Mankind'
Chapter 2: Negroes and Jews in the Western Imaginaire
Chapter 3: All Africa and her Prodigies
Chapter 4: The Loango Turn
Chapter 5: 'The most striking circumstance': black Jews sustaining the doctrine of the unity of mankind
Chapter 6: Polygenists, black Jews and the proofs for the disunity of man
Chapter 7: The Racial Face
Chapter 8: The Black/Jew
Chapter 9: The Black/Jew in the Racial State
Chapter 10: Rassenwahn
Bibliography