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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 February 2009
1 Birnbaum, P., ‘Anti-semitism and anticapitalism in modern France’, in Malino, F. and Wasserstein, B., eds., The Jews in modern France (Hanover, N.H., 1985), p. 215Google Scholar.
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3 Lindemann, reproduces the following: ‘he described a “whole crowd of low, preying Jews [who] followed in the wake of the invasion”’ (p. 115)Google Scholar.
4 Wilson, S., Ideology and experience (East Brunswick, N.J., 1982), 475 and n. 185, p. 502Google Scholar; Lovsky, F., ed., L' Antisémitisme chrétien (Paris, 1970), p. 39Google Scholar. Lovsky, finally, does not give a page reference for the quotation.
5 Zola, E., La Débâcle (‘Les Rougon-Macquart’, 5 vols., Paris, 1967 edn, Editions Fasquelle et Gallimard), V, 742–3Google Scholar. This is a particularly brutal novel and one ought to expect these corpse-robbers to be described harshly – the charge of antisemitism must derive from the identification of the looters as Jews.
6 Ibid. p. 1540, notes by Henri Mitterand, who names the journalist as Gustave Frédérix.
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