
New Books Network Lisa Silverman, "The Postwar Antisemite: Culture and Complicity After the Holocaust" (Oxford UP, 2025)
Dec 28, 2025
Lisa Silverman, a Professor of History and Jewish Studies, dives into her new book exploring the notion of the 'postwar Antisemite.' She discusses how Germans and Austrians used the constructed figure of the Antisemite to navigate their changed realities after World War II. Silverman compares cultural responses in West and East Germany and Austria, and analyzes how gender shapes antisemitic narratives. She also connects the persistence of antisemitism to contemporary political debates, highlighting urgent themes of complicity and identity.
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Antisemite As Constructed Cultural Figure
- Lisa Silverman reframes postwar culture by focusing on the constructed figure of the Antisemite rather than the Jew.
- This figural Antisemite functioned as a tool of exculpation and national self-redefinition after the Holocaust.
Claims Conference Shaped Her Research Path
- Lisa Silverman recounts working for the Claims Conference in Frankfurt and New York after reunification.
- That experience sparked her interest in German and Austrian Jewish history and shaped her research path.
Jewish Difference As Analytic Tool
- "Jewish difference" names the binary framework used in cultural narratives to mark Jew and non-Jew.
- The concept explains texts that are neither overtly anti-Semitic nor philosemitic yet still rely on Jewish difference.
