Singerman #1632.
"Pinkert's other activities included the 'First International Anti-Jewish Congress' which he organized at Dresden in 1882, with delegates from several parts of Germany, Austria, and Hungary. It met under the shadow of the ritual murder trials of Tísza-Eszlár in Hungary and the platform was decorated with a portrait of Esther Solymossi, the victim of the alleged murder, which Ivan Simonyí, one of the Hungarian participants, had brought with him." -p.103
Author(s): PULZER, Peter G. J.
Series: Wiley New Dimensions in History: Essays in Comparative History
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Year: 1964
Language: English
Commentary: Vector, ocr-only pdf from heavily marked paper original. TEXT NOT PROOFED.
City: New York, NY
Tags: Antisemitische Deutschsoziale Partei, counter-Semitism, capitalism, Catholic Revival, Dresden, Dreyfus Case, Eisenmenger, Entdecktes Judentum, First International Anti-Jewish Congress, Pan-Germanism, Liberalism, loxism, Nihilism, A. Pinkert, racialism, Reichsgeldmonopol, ritual murder, primitive savage, Social Democrats, Der Talmudjude, Der Zukunftsstaat
The Rise of Political Anti-Semitism in Germany and Austria - Binding strip
Half-title
New Dimensions in History
Title Page
Printer's Imprint
Dedication
Preface
References
CONTENTS
The Jews and Their Environment
1. The Jews
2. The Structure of Germany and Austria
The Rejection of Liberalism
3. Romantic Conservatism
4. Constitutionalism and the Rule of Law
5. Capitalism and Social Mobility
6. Racialism
7. Sadism and Nihilism
8. The Cult of Grass Roots
Germany, 1867-1900
9. The Conservative Intellectuals
10. Stöcker and the Berlin Movement
11. National and International Organization
12. Böckel and Ahlwardt
13. The Changing Role of the Conservative Party
Austria, 1867-1900
14. The Failure of Liberalism
15. The Nationality Question
16. Economic Anti-Semitism
17. Schönerer and the Liberal Split
18. Lueger and the Catholic Revival
19. The "United Christians"
20. The Battle for Vienna
Germany and Austria, 1900-1914
21. German Parties After 1900
22. Austrian Parties After 1900
23. The Para-Political Organizations
24. Pan-Germanism
25. New Ideologies for Old Causes
26. The Intellectual Prestige of Anti-Semitism
27. The Social Democrats
28. The Catholic and Protestant Churches
29. The Sociology of Anti-Semitic Movements
30. The Position in 1914
Epilogue; 1914 -1938
Appendices
Bibliographical Note
Index