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Chapter Two - From Jewish Other to Citizen of the Mosaic Faith

A Brief Legal History of Christian Ambivalence

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 November 2024

Mareike Riedel
Affiliation:
Macquarie University, Sydney
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Summary

This chapter explores the interplay between Christian ambivalence and the law from the late Middle Ages to the period of emancipation. I begin my discussion by exploring how theological arguments about Jewish inferiority and difference entered both canon law and secular laws during the late medieval period, turning Christian supersessionism into Christian domination in the sociolegal realm. I also consider the increasing racialisation of Jewish difference through the purity of blood doctrine that solidified boundaries between Jews and Christians in Spain at a time when large numbers of Jews had converted to Christianity. Focusing on the crucial period of Jewish emancipation, I then trace how Christian ambivalence further seeped into the secular legal imagination, shaping ideas about what constitutes a proper ‘religion’ in the modern secular nation state. Throughout this chapter, I explore some of the shifting dynamics of conversion and assimilation and their intersections with the racialisation of Jewish difference, which cast doubt on the possibility of Jewish equality.

Type
Chapter
Information
Law and Jewish Difference
Ambivalent Encounters
, pp. 43 - 86
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2024

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