Describing Jewish representation both by Jews and Gentiles in
the British Romantic era, Scrivener integrates popular culture with
belletristic writing to explore the wildly varying treatments of
stereotypical figures: the pedlar, the moneylender, the Jew's
daughter, "la belle juive," the convert, the prophet, the
alchemist, and the criminal. This sweeping study finds that
pervasive Judaeophobia, reflecting old religious conflicts and new
anxieties over modernity, affects but does not wholly determine the
discourses that reflect a mix of Jewish and English cultures.
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