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These tropes fatefully formed Adolf Hitler's worldview, contributing to World War II and the Holocaust, which killed at least 6 million Jews (67% pre-war European Jews). [6] [12] Since the 20th century, antisemitic libels' usage has been documented among groups that self-identify as "anti-Zionists". [13] [14] [page needed]
An antisemitic trope is a false story inciting antisemitism. Despite being false by definition, antisemitic tropes often form part of antisemitic conspiracy theories . The main article for this category is Antisemitic trope .
The "Orientalness of Jews", particularly that of Jewish women, was a common trope in anti-Semitic German literature of the 19th century. Examples of this stereotype are found in Hauff's novella Jud Süß (1827), Hebbel's play Judith (1840) and Grillparzer's play Die Jüdin von Toledo (1872).
Throughout most of the 18th and 19th centuries, anti-semitism in America was common, though not typically to the extent that was endemic in Europe during the same period. [ 10 ] [ 11 ] Jews were viewed as a race in America as early as 1654, when the Governor of New Amsterdam referred to them as a "deceitful race" in his efforts to expel the ...
The concept of philosemitism is not new, and it was arguably avowed by such thinkers as the 19th-century philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche, who described himself as an "anti-anti-Semite." [ 6 ] Philosemitism is an expression of the larger phenomenon of allophilia , admiration for foreign cultures as embodied in the more widely known Anglophilia ...
Louis H. Feldman argues: "We must take issue with the communis sensus that the pagan writers are predominantly anti-Semitic." [ 3 ] He asserts that "one of the great puzzles that has confronted the students of anti-semitism is the alleged shift from pro-Jewish statements found in the first pagan writers who mention the Jews ... to the vicious ...
The cartoon depicts “the prime minister of Israel as a guide dog with a Star of David collar leading the president of the United States, shown wearing a skullcap,” per the New York Times ...
Anti-Soros conspiracy theories in Hungary originated in 1993, with the work of István Csurka, a far-right intellectual who depicted Soros as an anti-patriotic globalist Jewish financier capable of controlling governments. [20] [21] This depiction is based on the anti-Semitic trope of the "Jewish puppet-master".