"A remarkable study, one that I recommend to any reader
fascinated by the shaping of culture and the power of the
psyche."
&3151;"The Forward"
How typical of his generation was T.S. Eliot when he complained
that Hitler made an intelligent anti-semitism impossible for a
generation? In her new book, Loathsome Jews and Engulfing Women,
novelist and critic, Andrea Freud Loewenstein examines the
persistent anti-semitic tendencies in modernist, British
intellectual culture. Pursuing her subject with literary,
historical, and psychological analyses, Loewenstein argues that
this anti-semitism must be understood in terms of its metaphorical
link with misogyny.
Situated in the context of the history of Jews in Britain,
Loathsome Jews and Engulfing Women begins by questioning the
widespread belief that the British government was a friend to the
Jews in the 30s and 40s. Loewenstein shows that, as evident in the
hypocrisy of many British governmental policies prior to and during
WWII, Britain actively collaborated in the Jews' destruction.
Against the backdrop of this tragic complicity in the Holocaust,
Loewenstein evaluates Jewish stereotypes in the works of three
representative twentieth-century British thinkers and writers. Her
analysis provides a revealing critique of British modernism.
In a larger sense, Loathsome Jews and Engulfing Womenexplores
the riddle of prejudice. Loewenstein argues that anti-semitism is
nurtured in an environment populated by other hatreds --misogyny,
homophobia, and racism. To explain the interaction of these
prejudices, she develops an investigative model grounded in object
relations theory and informed by the works of such theoretically
diverse authors as Virginia Woolf, Kate Millett, and Alice Miller.
Loewenstein lucidly argues within an autobiographical framework,
insisting on the need for critics to . . . look within ourselves
for 'that terrible other' rather than to complacently assume that
we ourselves exist outside the ideology of power.
This well-written and readable book will be of interest to many
people, ranging students of British history to psychoanalysts, from
historians of Jewish culture to anyone interested in feminist and
literary theory.
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