Blood Libels, Hostile Archives
Title
Blood Libels, Hostile Archives
Subtitle
Reclaiming Interrupted Jewish Lives
Price
€ 43,95 excl. VAT
ISBN
9789633868256
Format
Paperback
Number of pages
200
Language
English
Publication date
Dimensions
13.5 x 21 cm
Imprint

Magda Teter

Blood Libels, Hostile Archives

Reclaiming Interrupted Jewish Lives

As a minority group for most of their history, Jews were often marginalized and persecuted. Traces of their lives can be found in the archives of the dominant societies, but only as they intersected with the concerns of those in power. Just as Natalie Zemon Davis, Emmanuel Le Roy Ladurie, Carlo Ginzburg, and others recovered the voices of the peasants, so, too, scholars of Jewish history and culture have productively mined these reservoirs of evidence to retrieve glimpses of the ordinary lives of Jews. Stories from Hostile Archives explores what can be reclaimed about everyday lives from what can be called “hostile archives”—from archival evidence produced and collected explicitly to manufacture malicious tales and pass them as “facts.” For Jewish history, in some places, these archival sources may be the only remaining records documenting the lives of Jews there.

The book explores two places: Trent, in northern Italy, and Sandomierz, in eastern Poland. Though hundreds of miles away, the towns have many things in common: both had been sites of anti-Jewish libels falsely accusing Jews of killing Christian children, Trent in 1475 and Sandomierz twice—in 1698 and 1710; in both, the instigators of the Jews’ persecution left unique and extensive archives, both towns have physical remnants of these deadly affairs, and, finally, neither town has an existing Jewish population. Yet, centuries later, these anti-Jewish libels have not been relegated to the past; in both towns, their legacies still reverberate today.

Author

Magda Teter

Magda Teter is Professor of History and the Shvidler Chair of Judaic Studies at Fordham University.