Immagine dell'autore.
9 opere 371 membri 3 recensioni

Sull'Autore

Helmut Walser Smith is the Martha Rivers Ingram Professor of History at Vanderbilt University, a recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship, ad the author of the acclaimed the Butcher's Tale: Murder and Anti-Semitism in a German Town. He lives in Nashville, Tennessee.

Opere di Helmut Walser Smith

Etichette

Informazioni generali

Data di nascita
1962-12-10
Sesso
male
Nazionalità
USA
Nazione (per mappa)
United States of America
Germany
Luogo di nascita
Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany
Attività lavorative
historian
professor
Organizzazioni
Vanderbilt University (assistant professor of history)

Utenti

Recensioni

Not really what I was looking for. History of Germany through memoirs, cartography, etc.
 
Segnalato
FKarr | Feb 13, 2022 |
A rather fascinating book about antisemitism and the myth of the blood ritual set in the small Prussian town of Konitz during the year 1900. The incident starts off when the torso of a local high school student Ernst Winter who had been missing was found. Quickly other parts were found and due and the autopsy that concluded, rather falsely that his blood had been drained before he was cut up. In addition, according to Hoffmann, Christian butcher in the town, whose family and newspaper connections would play a large part in whipping up the antisemitic frenzy identified the cuts as done by a Kosher butcher . This lead the public to believe that it was the Jewish community that had killed the boy so they could get his blood for the so called blood ritual that they believed Jews participated in. This view was then whipped into a frenzy by antisemitic newspapers that sent reporters to cover the case. Eventually it would get so bad that the mayor of the town had to call in the army to suppress rioters who had started to attack the Jewish people of the town and wanted to lynch the Jewish butch Adolf Lewy who was accused of committing the crime in his cellar. Once things started to cool investigates easily debunked the blood ritual charges however a large part of the community thought that they were shielding the Jews or had been paid off. At the end no one was ever charged for the crime but some people were sent to jail for perjury for lying about events during the case or in the case of Moritz Lewy, Adolfs son falsely sentenced for perjury because he couldn't remember if he had ever met Winter on the street.

Smith does a great job laying out the events of the crime and succeeding events as well as looking at all the people involved and analyzing their motives. My only real problem this the book was the chapter that accounts for the history and origin of the blood ritual charge. While it was interesting, I felt it took away from the main point of the book which was the Konitz Affair and the antisemitism during the event but could see why it was included so as to give the reader an idea why the people believed what they did. Although I think he makes up for it with the last chapter the presents some compelling cases as to who probably really killed Winter and why.

I also found it interesting that the authority throughout the affair never believed the Blood ritual charge and that it was mainly the poor and middle class who promoted it in what was for the most part settlements of old grudges. Another interesting point Smith makes is that it seemed that Germans of Catholic persuasion tended to be the majority of the persecutors during this time while the majority of blood ritual accusation happened predominantly in Protestant towns. It's rather sad that only 40 years later instead of protecting the Jewish people of Germany they would take part in their extinction allowing neighbors to turn on neighbor with no protection for the victims at all.

Overall if you're interested in cases of antisemitism prior to WW2 and/or are interested in trying to understand how you get to the outcome of the Holocaust this is a great book to pick up, as it show trends that might have been contributing factors. Furthermore, Smith as a nice writing style that at times makes you think you are reading a crime thriller and he as meticulously researched the event to create a very though provoking book on how easy it is for us to slide into our prejudges.
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
bakabaka84 | 1 altra recensione | Nov 14, 2012 |
The Butcher's Tale is a very good, and very interesting book. The "Tale" centres on a particular event---the murder, and dismemberment, of a young man in the small town of Konitz in March, 1900 which turned into a huge anti-semitic protest because, in public opinion, the murder was attributed to a Jewish butcher as an example of the age-old libel about Jews killing Christians to get their blood. What makes the book particularly interesting is that Smith not only explores the event itself, and comes up with a well-reasoned theory as to who might actually have committed the murder, but he goes much further in exploring the meaning and the dynamic of the reaction to the murder and the strong anti-semitic element that it took on. He does so by drawing on historical analysis, sociology, anthropology, psychology, and communications and literary theories. The following sums up his approach:

"Process is what makes latent anti-Semitism manifest, transforming private enmity and neighborly disputes into the blood-stained canvases of persecutory landscapes. In one context, the whispers of rumor and the wages of private malice all on heedless ears; in another, they unleash a murderous dynamic. The preexistence of anti -Semitism, nationalism, or racism influences outcomes, but the outcome cannot be fully understood by a static measure of attitudes, anti-Semitic or otherwise. Looking at the process, we see historical forces converging: how local enmities become potent symbols resonating with larger antagonisms; how spiteful stories and tavern tales are elevated to public spectacle; and how these tales conform to a preexisting pattern of political and religious beliefs. We can also see how the accusations shift relations of power and support political agendas, and how people caught up in the resulting dynamic come to believe the objective truth of their own lies."

It is interesting to note that throughout the various events and investigations, the authorities never gave any credence to the accusation of ritual murder and they saw the wild and implausible accusations for what they were, and often punished those perpetrators for perjury. It was also the authorities who twice called in the army to make sure that demonstrations and high feelings did not get out of hand. This, as Smith points out, was a key point: "In 1900, imperial Germany safeguarded the rule of law and ensured the protection of its citizens, including Jews. Four decades later, the Third Reich attempted to annihilate the Jews...and encouraged violence. In this Hobbesian perspective, the state remains the only barrier between us and the hatchets of our neighbors, and, as a corollary, in 1900 only the Prussian army saved the Jews of Konitz from the clubs and axes of ‘ordinary Germans'".

Well documented, well researched, well written; a thoughtful and thought-provoking book.
… (altro)
½
 
Segnalato
John | 1 altra recensione | Feb 18, 2007 |

Liste

Premi e riconoscimenti

Potrebbero anche piacerti

Statistiche

Opere
9
Utenti
371
Popolarità
#64,992
Voto
½ 3.7
Recensioni
3
ISBN
35
Lingue
2

Grafici & Tabelle