African-Americans have reacted to Jews not only as neighbors in the American communal polity but as a fellow diaspora people. This has been true at least since the late nineteenth century, when Caribbean-born Edward Wilmot Blyden embraced Herzl's Zionism as a template for Africa's redemption, and black newspapers in the United States expressed measured sympathy for Jewish victims of Russian pogroms. The focus here is on the career of W. E. B. Du Bois, the preeminent African-American intellectual of the first half of the twentieth century, as a prism through which to view the global impact on African-American attitudes toward Jews during the period marked by the rise of Nazi Germany and the Holocaust.
%0 Journal Article
%1 brackman2000calamity
%A Brackman, Harold
%D 2000
%I Johns Hopkins University Press
%J American Jewish History
%K anti-semitism black-supremacy du-bois nazi-germany racism
%N 1
%P 53-93
%R 10.1353/ajh.2000.0004
%T Ä Calamity Almost Beyond Comprehension": Nazi Anti-Semitism and the Holocaust in the Thought of W. E. B. Du Bois
%U https://muse.jhu.edu/article/532
%V 88
%X African-Americans have reacted to Jews not only as neighbors in the American communal polity but as a fellow diaspora people. This has been true at least since the late nineteenth century, when Caribbean-born Edward Wilmot Blyden embraced Herzl's Zionism as a template for Africa's redemption, and black newspapers in the United States expressed measured sympathy for Jewish victims of Russian pogroms. The focus here is on the career of W. E. B. Du Bois, the preeminent African-American intellectual of the first half of the twentieth century, as a prism through which to view the global impact on African-American attitudes toward Jews during the period marked by the rise of Nazi Germany and the Holocaust.
@article{brackman2000calamity,
abstract = {African-Americans have reacted to Jews not only as neighbors in the American communal polity but as a fellow diaspora people. This has been true at least since the late nineteenth century, when Caribbean-born Edward Wilmot Blyden embraced Herzl's Zionism as a template for Africa's redemption, and black newspapers in the United States expressed measured sympathy for Jewish victims of Russian pogroms. The focus here is on the career of W. E. B. Du Bois, the preeminent African-American intellectual of the first half of the twentieth century, as a prism through which to view the global impact on African-American attitudes toward Jews during the period marked by the rise of Nazi Germany and the Holocaust.},
added-at = {2021-07-24T10:49:45.000+0200},
author = {Brackman, Harold},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/28aa0885b2c74e2299dc82ac5f2a10a22/3lli3},
day = 1,
doi = {10.1353/ajh.2000.0004},
howpublished = {Project Muse},
interhash = {a03fc16779541cc7154c99ffcb688ba7},
intrahash = {8aa0885b2c74e2299dc82ac5f2a10a22},
issn = {1086-3141},
journal = {American Jewish History},
keywords = {anti-semitism black-supremacy du-bois nazi-germany racism},
language = {en},
month = {march},
number = 1,
pages = {53-93},
publisher = {Johns Hopkins University Press},
timestamp = {2021-07-24T10:51:45.000+0200},
title = {"A Calamity Almost Beyond Comprehension": Nazi Anti-Semitism and the Holocaust in the Thought of W. E. B. Du Bois},
url = {https://muse.jhu.edu/article/532},
volume = 88,
year = 2000
}