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The Radical Jewish Tradition by Donny Gluckstein

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The Radical Jewish Tradition

Revolutionaries, Resistance Fighters and Firebrands

Donny Gluckstein, Janey Stone

Verso Books · Print & ebook · Forthcoming

Reading lane: Jewish History

The gripping and inspiring account of Jewish socialist struggles against tsarist pogroms, exploitative sweatshops and murderous Nazis across three continents The book celebrates Jewish radicalism from the Tsarist Empire to Poland and Germany, from London to New York.

At a Glance

Who It's For

Good for readers who enjoy Jewish HistoryGood for readers interested in politicalGood for fans of Politics

Book Details

Authors
Donny Gluckstein, Janey Stone
Publisher
Verso Books
Published
Forthcoming
Format
Print & ebook
Theme
Jewish History · Orthodox Judaism
Reading lane
Jewish History

Affinity

Publisher Categories

  • Revolutionary History

  • Political Commentary

  • Reform Judaism

About This Book

The gripping and inspiring account of Jewish socialist struggles against tsarist pogroms, exploitative sweatshops and murderous Nazis across three continents The book celebrates Jewish radicalism from the Tsarist Empire to Poland and Germany, from London to New York. Fighting oppression and exploitation took numerous political forms, including left Zionism, Bundism and revolutionary Marxism. This inspiring radical tradition was ultimately checked by the callous indifference...

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The gripping and inspiring account of Jewish socialist struggles against tsarist pogroms, exploitative sweatshops and murderous Nazis across three continents The book celebrates Jewish radicalism from the Tsarist Empire to Poland and Germany, from London to New York. Fighting oppression and exploitation took numerous political forms, including left Zionism, Bundism and revolutionary Marxism. This inspiring radical tradition was ultimately checked by the callous indifference of capitalist governments to refugees and the horror of Auschwitz. However, its lessons must be passed on to inform working-class and anti-imperialist struggles in a world in crisis.This book recovers some of that long-neglected history. Before the Second World War, the majority of Jews were working-class and part of a wider struggle alongside their non-Jewish comrades on the left. To illuminate this background, the issue of Jewish identity is analysed along political, cultural and sociological lines. This is essential because, today, the claim of Israel and its apologists to represent Jews everywhere, the growth of the antisemitic far right and the approach of the left to the Jewish question are central issues. A knowledge of the breadth of Jewish resistance aids understanding of these debates.

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