Antisemitism in Germany, 1890-1933: how popular was it?
TitleAntisemitism in Germany, 1890-1933: how popular was it?
Author
Call number940.53180943/0025
Object number09348a
Place of publicationNew York, New York, United States
PublisherBerghahn Books
Year of publication
2016
Physical descriptionpp17-40
MaterialArticle
Series titleVermont Studies on Nazi Germany and the Holocaust
ISBN9781782386421
NotesArticle from the book 'The Germans and the Holocaust : popular responses to the persecution and murder of the Jews' pp17-40
Description
Levy distinguishes between anti-Jewish prejudice and anti-semitism - the latter being an actual willingness to act on the basis of anti-Jewish animus,
politically or through acts of violence. From the 1890s through about the midpoint of World War I, antisemitism was not especially widespread in Germany. German Jews enjoyed legal equality and prospered economically and professionally. The German defeat in 1918 was the turning point. At that time there was a significant increase in the number of Germans willing to join or support political movements that advocated concrete anti-Jewish measures. By 1933, a large number of Germans had abandoned any commitment to the equality of Jews