
New Books Network Maurice Samuels, "Alfred Dreyfus: The Man at the Center of the Affair" (Yale UP, 2024)
Oct 21, 2025
Maurice Samuels, the Betty Jane Anlyan Professor of French and director of the Yale Program for the Study of Antisemitism, dives deep into the life of Alfred Dreyfus. He discusses Dreyfus's Jewish identity and how it shaped his experience in a divided France. With insights from a newly available archive, Samuels reveals the impact of antisemitism on Dreyfus's life and the global Jewish community's response to his wrongful conviction. The conversation draws parallels to contemporary issues, emphasizing the importance of resilience against rising antisemitism.
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Dreyfus's Jewishness Reframes The Affair
- Centering Dreyfus on his Jewish identity reframes the Affair's causes and consequences.
- His Jewishness shaped the accusation, the national reaction, and global Jewish politics.
Anti-Semitism Fueled The National Crisis
- Anti-Semitism was central both to why Dreyfus was accused and why the case inflamed the nation.
- The Affair mattered because it forced France to confront whether citizenship was universal or based on blood and soil.
Framed After A Misread Handwriting Match
- The army misread a discarded letter and fixed suspicion on Dreyfus because he was the lone Jewish officer on the staff.
- He endured a public degradation, exile to Devil's Island, and brutal solitary conditions for five years.








