New Books in History

164 Maurice Samuels: Jewish Assimilation, Integration and the Dreyfus Affair (JP)

Feb 5, 2026
Maurice Samuels, historian and director of Yale’s Program for the Study of Antisemitism, explores Jewish life in France from emancipation to the Dreyfus crisis. He traces Dreyfus’s story, the rise of public intellectuals like Zola, distinct regional Jewish communities, and the difference between assimilation and integration. The conversation also covers laïcité, Léon Blum’s ascent, and colonial-era tensions shaping modern French Jewish identity.
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INSIGHT

Jewishness Central To The Dreyfus Story

  • Maurice Samuels argues Jewishness is underplayed in Dreyfus scholarship and deserves central focus.
  • He frames the affair as deeply shaped by the Jewish identity of Alfred Dreyfus and its social implications.
ANECDOTE

Dreyfus's Ordeal And The Zola Intervention

  • Maurice Samuels recounts Dreyfus's 1894 conviction, deportation to Devil's Island, and years of wrongful exile.
  • He highlights Emile Zola's J'accuse and the eventual 1906 reinstatement after intense public campaigning.
INSIGHT

Jews As Metaphor For Modernity

  • Samuels explains Jews became a metaphor for modernity and targets for anti-Semites linking them to capitalism and change.
  • He points to Edouard Drumont's La France Juive (1886) as radicalizing attacks on specific Jews.
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