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ID077863
Title ProperAnti-Israelism and Anti-Semitism
Other Title Informationcommon characteristics and motifs
LanguageENG
AuthorGerstenfeld, Manfred
Publication2007.
Summary / Abstract (Note)Anti-Semitism's core theme is that Jews embody absolute evil. It has been propagated intensely for many centuries. This extreme fallacy and its principal submotifs have remained largely the same over the ages. Their representation, however, has evolved according to circumstances. The three main permutations of the core theme are religious anti-Semitism-one might call it more precisely anti-Judaism, ethnic (racist) anti-Semitism, and anti-Israelism or anti-Zionism.
These three permutations have a number of common characteristics. There is an ongoing, powerful promotion of a discourse of Jew-hatred. The main motif of the Jew constituting absolute evil manifests itself according to the prevailing worldviews at a given time. Verbal or physical attacks are common against both Jews and Israelis. Jews and nowadays Israel are judged by standards applied to them but not to others. In its extreme form, the anti-Semitic process has three stages: demonization, isolation, and elimination.
The anti-Semitic character of anti-Israelism can be proved through the analysis of cartoons, opinion survey findings, statistical analysis, and semantics. During the summer 2006 war in Lebanon, further proof emerged that anti-Semitism and anti-Israelism go hand in hand
`In' analytical NoteJewish Political Studies Review Vol. 19, No.1-2: Spring 2007: p83-108
Journal SourceJewish Political Studies Review Vol. 19, No.1-2: Spring 2007: p83-108
Key WordsAnti-Israelism ;  Anti-Semitism ;  Lebanon War 2006