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Review: 'That’s Funny, You Don’t Look Anti-Semitic' and 'Antisemitism'

David Herman reviews two books on antisemitism

January 31, 2020 14:32
Annie Besant
2 min read

That’s Funny, You Don’t Look Anti-Semitic by Steve Cohen (No Pasaran Media, £7.99) and Antisemitism by Hermann Bahr (Rixdorf Editions, £9.99)

In his moving Chanukah message to Britain’s Jews, Boris Johnson spoke of “dark, resurgent antisemitism.” These two very contrasting books  reflect this.   

Steve Cohen’s exploration of antisemitism on the left was first published in 1984 and is now available in a new edition, ten years after the author’s death. Cohen spent his adult life in various fringe groups on the left and this short book is an attempt by a lifetime socialist to explain left-wing antisemitism. It is part history, part polemic. The history falls into two parts: the left’s attacks on wealthy Jewish financiers and immigration during the heyday of imperialism at the turn of the century, and then the attacks on Zionism since the war. 

The polemical parts of the book are more interesting. How can the left deny its antisemitism in case it helps the Tories? How can it still equate Jews with capitalism and mix up antisemitism with anti-Zionism? And, finally, “denialism” — how can left-wingers simply deny their antisemitism, despite all the evidence to the contrary?