Blakeslee examines the history and current status of Jews and
antisemitism in the United States to reveal what we know of
antisemitism and the ways in which this knowledge is seriously
flawed. He explores the significant historical role antisemitism
played in the formation of Jewish advocacy organizations and the
subsequent success they enjoyed over several decades of publicly
combating antisemitism. He then examines three specific incidents
in the 1990s and the ways the advocacy organizations responded.
Antisemitic attitudes and incidents in the United States have
dropped steadily since the post World War II revelations about the
Holocaust. While antisemitism has not disappeared entirely from the
American scene, it has dwindled to the point where the
Anti-Defamation League considers the average American not
antisemitic. Blakeslee probes why, if this statement is
accurate--and prevailing statistics suggest it is--prominent Jewish
advocacy organizations continue to lavish so much attention and
money on an issue of little actual significance. A provocative
study for all sociologists, researchers, and concerned lay people
involved with the heated debate over antisemitism, Jewish identity,
assimilation, Black-Jewish relations, and organizational
studies.
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