描述
开 本: 16开纸 张: 胶版纸包 装: 平装是否套装: 否国际标准书号ISBN: 9780812972030
Something has changed.
After the horrors of World War II, people everywhere believed
that it could never happen again, but today the evidence is
unmistakable that anti-Semitism is dramatically on the rise once
more. The torching of European synagogues, suicide terror in
Israel, the relentless comparison of the Israelis to Nazis, the
paranoid post–September 11 Internet-bred conspiracy theories, the
Holocaust-denial literature spreading throughout the Arab world,
the calumny and violence erupting on American college campuses:
Suddenly, a new anti-Semitism has become widespread, even
acceptable to some.
In this chilling and important new book, Ron Rosenbaum, author of
the highly praised Explaining Hitler,brings together a collection
of powerful essays about the origin and nature of the new
anti-Semitism. Paul Berman, Marie Brenner, David Brooks, Harold
Evans, Todd Gitlin, Jeffrey Goldberg, Bernard Lewis, David Mamet,
Amos Oz, Cynthia Ozick, Frank Rich, Jonathan Rosen, Edward Said,
Judith Shulevitz, Lawrence Summers, Jeffrey Toobin, and Robert
Wistrich are among the distinguished writers and intellectuals who
grapple with painful questions: Why now? What is—or isn’t—new? Is a
second Holocaust possible, this time in the Middle East? How does
anti-Semitism differ from anti-Zionism?
These are issues too dangerous to ignore, too pressing to deny.
Those Who Forget the Pastis an essential volume for understanding
the new bigotry of the twenty-first century.
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