Jewish Self-Hate

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20th century
20th century history
A01=Theodor Lessing
adolf hitler
Author_Theodor Lessing
Category=JMH
Category=QD
Category=QRJ
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german history
holocaust
jewish culture
jewish self-hatred
jewish studies
jewish thought
political debates
psychoanalysis
second world war
self-hating jew
theodor lessing
Weimar Republic
world war ii

Product details

  • ISBN 9781789209921
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 03 Mar 2021
  • Publisher: Berghahn Books
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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A seminal text in Jewish thought accessible to English readers for the first time.

The diagnosis of Jewish self-hatred has become almost commonplace in contemporary cultural and political debates, but the concept’s origins are not widely appreciated. In its modern form, it received its earliest and fullest expression in Theodor Lessing’s 1930 book Der jüdische Selbsthaß.

Written on the eve of Hitler’s ascent to power, Lessing’s hotly contested work has been variously read as a defense of the Weimar Republic, a platform for anti-Weimar sentiments, an attack on psychoanalysis, an inspirational personal guide, and a Zionist broadside.

“The truthful translation by Peter Appelbaum, including Lessing’s own footnotes, manages to make this book more readable than the German original. Two essays by Sander Gilman and Paul Reitter provide context and the wisdom of hindsight.”—Frank Mecklenburg, Leo Baeck Institute

From the forward by Sander Gilman:
Theodor Lessing’s (1872–1933)
Jewish Self-Hatred (1930) is the classic study of the pitfalls (rather than the complexities) of acculturation. Growing out of his own experience as a middle-class, urban, marginally religious Jew in Imperial and then Weimar Germany, he used this study to reject the social integration of the Jews into Germany society, which had been his own experience, by tracking its most radical cases…. Lessing’s case studies reflect the idea that assimilation (the radical end of acculturation) is by definition a doomed project, at least for Jews (no matter how defined) in the age of political antisemitism.

Theodor Lessing was a German-Jewish philosopher. He taught at Hanover Technical College until right-wing student protests forced him to leave in 1926, after which he worked as an independent scholar and journalist. He was assassinated in 1933 by two National Socialists.

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