Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-s2hrs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-14T22:45:03.953Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Who Was Who? Race and Jews in Turn-of-the-Century Britain

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 May 2013

Extract

Race—as a category—has commonly been understood as a response to difference. In the first instance, race offered a means of ordering unfamiliar peoples, whether encountered in the empire or at home. In the European historiography, the notion of “biological” race, defined by an inherited set of characteristics passed through the blood, possesses a particular genealogy: its roots can be found in the eighteenth century, its fullest articulation came in the late nineteenth century, and its twentieth-century decline was hastened by the Holocaust.

This article sets out a different, if not completely incompatible, thesis. It takes the case of British Jews to argue that racial categories could arise as a response to the apparent similarities, as well as the perceived differences, between Jews and other Britons. Put differently, in the late nineteenth century, Jews came increasingly to be identified as a race precisely because they were difficult to differentiate from their fellow citizens. Class proved a critical determinant. Jews became ever more invisible as they scaled the social ladder. “East End” Jews—poor and newly immigrated—might be readily detectable, but their middle- and upper-middle-class “West End” counterparts confounded observers. Notions of race, I will argue, emerged in part as a consequence of assimilation, delimiting difference in a nation where formal legal barriers to Jewish integration had been eliminated and social obstacles largely overcome.

Race was a staple term of the late nineteenth century. It proliferated throughout the language of the time.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © North American Conference of British Studies 2002

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 George, StockingRace, Culture and Evolution: Essays in the History of Anthropology (Chicago, 1982)Google Scholar; Stepan, Nancy, The Idea of Race in Science: Great Britain, 1800–1960 (Hampden, Conn., 1982)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Bolt, Christine, Victorian Attitudes to Race (London, 1971)Google Scholar; Barkan, Elazar, The Retreat of Scientific Racism: Changing Concepts of Race in Britain and the United States between the World Wars (Cambridge, 1992), pp. 1519Google Scholar; Kennedy, Paul and Nicholls, Anthony, eds., Nationalist and Racialist Movements in Britain and Germany before 1914 (London, 1981)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Banton, Michael and Harwood, Jonathan, The Race Concept (New York, 1975), p. 38Google Scholar; Malchow, H. L., Gothic Images of Race in Nineteenth-Century Britain (Stanford, Calif., 1996)Google Scholar; Barzun, Jacques, Race: A Study in Superstition (1934; rev. ed., New York, 1965), p. 203Google Scholar; Malik, Kenan, The Meaning of Race: Race, History, and Culture in Western Society (Basingstoke, 1996), p. 91CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Hannaford, Ivan, Race: The History of an Idea in the West (Washington, D.C., 1996)Google Scholar. On Jews and race, see Efron, John, Defenders of the Race: Jewish Doctors and Race Science in Finde-Siècle Europe (New Haven, Conn., 1994)Google Scholar; Mosse, George, Toward the Final Solution: A History of European Racism (1987; reprint, New York, 1997), pp. 65–76; 113–27Google Scholar; Yerushalmi, Yosef Haim, Assimilation and Racial Anti-Semitism: The Iberian and the German Models (New York, 1982)Google Scholar; Olender, Maurice, The Languages of Paradise: Race, Religion and Philology in the Nineteenth Century, trans. Goldhammer, Arthur (Cambridge, 1992)Google Scholar; King, James, The Biology of Race (Berkeley, 1981)Google Scholar.

2 On Jewish assimilation, see Black, Eugene, Social Politics of Anglo-Jewry, 1880–1920 (Oxford, 1988)Google Scholar; Endelman, Todd, Radical Assimilation in English Jewish History, 1656–1945 (Bloomington, Ind., 1990)Google Scholar; Feldman, David, Englishmen and Jews: Social Relations and Political Culture, 1840–1914 (New Haven, Conn., 1994)Google Scholar; Cesarani, David, ed., The Making of Modem Anglo-Jewry (Oxford, 1990)Google Scholar; Holmes, Colin, Antisemitism in British Society, 1876–1939 (New York, 1979)Google Scholar; Williams, Bill, The Making of Manchester Jewry (Manchester, 1976), pp. 78110Google Scholar; Steyn, Juliet, The Jew: Assumptions of Identity (New York, 1999), esp. pp. 42–78, 98114Google Scholar; Efron, , Defenders of the Race, p. 28Google Scholar.

3 See, esp., Rich, Paul, Race and Empire in British Politics, 2d ed. (Cambridge, 1990), pp. 1226Google Scholar; Gilroy, Paul, There Ain't No Black in the Union Jack (London, 1987)Google Scholar; Stepan, , The Idea of Race; Bolt, Victorian Attitudes; Barkan, The Retreat of Scientific Racism, pp. 1519Google Scholar. Mosse, , Toward the Final Solution, pp. 65–76, 113–27Google Scholar.

4 At the end of the eighteenth century, Lavater admitted that he did not know how to classify Jews. On racial constructions of the Jew, see Cheyette, Mosse, Toward the Final Solution, p. 14Google Scholar; Feldman, , Englishmen and Jews, p. 342Google Scholar; Efron, , Defenders of the Race, p. 35Google Scholar; Bryan, , Constructions of ‘The Jew’ in English Literature and Society: Racial Representations, 1875–1945 (Cambridge, 1993), p. 15Google Scholar.

5 On the Beck case, see Committee of Inquiry into the Case of Mr.Beck, Adolf, Report from the Committee Together with Minutes of Evidence, Appendix, and Facsimiles of Various Documents (London, 1904)Google Scholar; Watson, Eric, Adolf Beck (Edinburgh, 1924)Google Scholar; Chadwick, Roger, Bureaucratic Mercy: The Home Office and the Treatment of Capital Cases in Victorian Britain (New York, 1992)Google Scholar.

6 Fresh ‘Double’ Mystery,” Daily News (1 September 1904), p. 5Google Scholar.

7 Briggs, John, Harrison, Christopher, McInnes, Angus, and Vincent, David, Crime and Punishment in England (New York, 1996), p. 232CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

8 On Beck's previous career, see Report, pp. 113–19.

9 Director of Public Prosecutions, quoted in Committee of Inquiry, Report, p. 254.

10 T. Duerdin Dutton to the Under Secretary of State, Home Office, 25 May 1898, Public Record Office (PRO), Home Office (HO) 144/939/A60181. On the habitual criminal, see Wiener, Martin, Reconstructing the Criminal: Culture, Law and Policy in England, 1830–1914 (Cambridge, 1990), pp. 342–58Google Scholar.

11 Forrest Fulton to Sir M. W. Ridley, M.P., Secretary of State, 13 July 1898, PRO, HO 144/939/A60181.

12 Arthur Douglas, Home Office, to Ponsonby, 16 August 1904, PRO, HO 144/939/A60181.

13 M.D.C. [Chalmers] of Secretary of State, Home Department to H. H. Asquith, 24 August 1904, PRO, HO 144/940/A50181.

14 Sully, Clifford, Mistaken Identity (London, 1925)Google Scholar. On the role of the press in creating scandal, see Walkowitz, Judith, City of Dreadful Delight (Chicago, 1992)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

15 Sims, G. R., “The Police and Mr. Beck,” Daily Mail (29 August 1904), p. 5Google Scholar. On the Daily Mails conservatism, see Koss, Steven, The Rise and Fall of the Political Press in Britain (Chapel Hill, N.C., 1981), p. 395Google Scholar.

16 Daily Telegraph (8 August, 1904).

17 Justice—Blind and Deaf!Pall Mall Gazette (26 November 1904)Google Scholar.

18 The Case of Adolf Beck,” Nation (22 December 1904), p. 495Google Scholar. See also An English Dreyfus Case,” Harper's Weekly 48 (24 September 1904), p. 1464Google Scholar; Adolf Becks Sag,” Aftenpost (6 September 1904)Google Scholar, PRO, HO 144/940. If Beck was the “English Dreyfus,” it was because of the suspicion of a cover-up. Harper's acknowledged that the Beck affair was different from the Dreyfus case because English public opinion was unified behind the foreigner and there was no evident conspiracy to imprison the wrong man. The further inaccuracy of the term—given Smith's Jewishness and guilt and Dreyfus's Jewishness and innocence—is not mentioned in any of the press accounts.

19 A.A.D., “The Case of Adolf Beck, Printed for Use of the Cabinet,” 7 December 1904, PRO, HO 144/941/A50181.

20 Committee of Inquiry, Report, p. viiiGoogle Scholar; Lambourne, Gerald, The Fingerprint Story (London, 1984)Google Scholar; Cole, Simon, Suspect Identities: A History of Fingerprinting and Criminal Identification (Cambridge, Mass., 2001)Google Scholar; Beavan, Colin, Fingerprints: The Origins of Crime Detection and the Murder Case That Launched Forensic Science (New York, 2001)Google Scholar.

21 Committee of Inquiry, Report, p. xiGoogle Scholar; C. E. Troup to Sir Spencer Walpole, 27 September 1904, PRO, HO 144/941/A50181.

22 “Distinctive Marks,” PRO, HO 144/939/A 60.181/50.

23 Leader, , Daily Telegraph (19 August 1904)Google Scholar, PRO, DPP 1/1.

24 Who is Smith?Evening News and Evening Mail (9 July 1904), p. 2Google Scholar.

25 Who Put Adolph Beck Away?Daily Mail (15 August 1904), p. 4Google Scholar. See also the Referee (4 September 1904).

26 Sims, George R., Two King's Pardons: The Martyrdom of Adolf Beck (London, 1904), pp. 11, 18Google Scholar.

27 The False Lord Willoughby: An Extraordinary Case of Mistaken Identity Which Led to the Imprisonment of an Innocent Man,” Famous Crimes, vol. 2, no. 35 [1904?], p. 201Google Scholar.

28 Who's Who?Evening News and Evening Mail (8 July 1904), p. 2Google Scholar. On a likeness between the two men, see The Case of Adolph Beck,” Daily Graphic (30 July 1904), p. 5Google Scholar.

29 On physical stereotypes, see Gilman, Sander, The Jew's Body (London, 1990)Google Scholar; Knox, Holmes, Antisemitism in British Society, pp. 17, 3648Google Scholar; Efron, , Defenders of the Race, pp. 5051Google Scholar; Robert, , Races of Men (1850; reprint, Miami: 1969), p. 133Google Scholar. In literature, see Cheyette, , Constructions of “The Jew” (Cambridge, 1993), pp. 1354Google Scholar; Cheyette, Bryan, ed., Between “Race” and Culture: Representations of “the Jew” in English and American Literature (Stanford, Calif., 1996), pp. 5, 36, 132–33Google Scholar; Rosenberg, Edgar, From Shylock to Svengali: Jewish Stereotypes in English Fiction (Stanford, Calif., 1960)Google Scholar; Ragussis, Michael, Figures of Conversion: The “Jewish Question” and English National Identity (Durham, N.C., 1995)Google Scholar. For an earlier period, see Felsenstein, Frank, Anti-Semitic Stereotypes: A Paradigm of Otherness in English Popular Culture, 1660–1830 (Baltimore, 1995), pp. 10–26, 40–58, 8788Google Scholar.

30 Beck's Double,” Daily Express (15 September 1904), p. 5Google Scholar.

31 Nor, for that matter, did Smith resemble the criminal types cataloged by physiognomists. See Cowling, Mary, The Artist as Anthropologist: The Representations of Type and Character in Victorian Art (Cambridge, 1989), pp. 290316Google Scholar.

32 Beck's Double,” Daily Graphic (16 September 1904), p. 8Google Scholar; The False Lord Willoughby: An Extraordinary Case of Mistaken Identity Which Led to the Imprisonment of an Innocent Man,” Famous Crimes, 2, no. 34 [1904?], p. 185Google Scholar; Beck's Double,” Evening News and Evening Mail (13 July 1904), p. 3Google Scholar; John Smith Found,” Chronicle (30 July 1904)Google Scholar; Sims, G. R., “A Dramatic Recital,” Daily Mail (16 September 1904), p. 5Google Scholar.

33 Beck and His Double,” Daily Mail (25 July, 1904), p. 3Google Scholar; “Adolf Beck's Life in Prison,” chap. 16, Evening News and Evening Mail (19 August 1904), p. 2Google Scholar.

34 Criminal Appeal,” Daily News (24 August 1904), p. 12Google Scholar. For other cases of doubles, see Daily News (16 August 1904), p. 12Google Scholar; (17 August 1904), p. 12; (18 August 1904), p. 12; (1 September 1904); (3 September 1904), p. 8; also see ‘I am Innocent’,” Daily Chronicle (27 August 1904)Google Scholar; Another ‘Double,’” News of the World (14 August 1904), p. 6Google Scholar.

35 Beck, Adolf, “The Story of Adolf Beck,” Evening News and Evening Mail (2 August 1904), p. 2Google Scholar.

36 Dagonet's Double,” Daily Express (1 August 1904), p. 5Google Scholar.

37 Committee of Inquiry, Report, p. 324Google Scholar.

38 Ibid., p. 325; The Real ‘John Smith’,” Pall Mall Gazette (16 September 1904), p. 2Google Scholar. On Meyer's lavish lifestyle, see Beck's Double: Life of Luxury,” Evening News and Evening Mail (2 August 1904), p. 3Google Scholar.

39 Beck's Release,” Evening News and Evening Mail (20 July 1904), p. 2Google Scholar.

40 “The False Lord Willoughby,” p. 203.

41 On the image of the wandering Jew, Ahasuerus, who refused Christ shelter en route to his crucifixion, see Mosse, , Toward the Final Solution, pp. 114–15Google Scholar; Rosenberg, , From Shylock to Svengali, pp. 10, 187233Google Scholar.

42 Chamberlain, Houston Stewart, The Foundations of the Nineteenth Century (Munich, 1899)Google Scholar, quoted in Field, Geoffrey, Evangelist of Race: Germanic Vision of Houston Stewart Chamberlain (New York, 1981), p. 93Google Scholar.

43 The Just Pride of the Jew,” Spectator 88 (14 June 1902): 909–10Google Scholar; Dowsett, Fred, “Both Sides of Jewish Character,” Westminster Review 130 (1888): 147–54Google Scholar. For a bibliography of articles and books on Jews (including European citations), see Jacobs, Joseph, The Jewish Question, 1875–1884: Bibliographical Handlist (London, 1885)Google Scholar.

44 Board of Trade, Alien Immigration, Report on the Volume and Effects of Recent Immigration from Eastern Europe into the United Kingdom (London, 1894), p. 42Google Scholar.

45 Barnett, Samuel, “Preface,” in Russell, C. and Lewis, H. S., The Jew in London: A Study of Racial Character and Present-Day Condition: Being Two Essays Prepared for the Toynbee Trustees (New York, 1901), pp. xxvixxviiGoogle Scholar.

46 Smith, Goldwin, “Can Jews Be Patriots: Response to Hermann Adler,” Nineteenth Century 3 (1878): 878Google Scholar.

47 Smith, Goldwin, “The Jewish Question,” Nineteenth Century 10 (October 1881): 495Google Scholar.

48 Russell, and Lewis, , The Jew in London, p. 138Google Scholar.

49 Colley, Linda, Britons: Forging the Nation, 1707–1837 (1992; reprint, London, 1994), esp. pp. 15, 18Google Scholar; Young, Robert J. C., Colonial Desire: Hybridity in Theory, Culture and Race (London, 1995)Google Scholar; Brody, Jennifer, Impossible Purities: Blackness, Femininity, and Victorian Culture (Durham, N.C., 1998)Google Scholar; Searle, G. R., The Quest for National Efficiency: A Study in British Politics and Political Thought, 1899–1914 (Oxford, 1971), pp. 6–18, 34–67, 9596Google Scholar; Soloway, Richard, Demography and Degeneration: Eugenics and the Declining Birthrate in Twentieth-Century Britain (1990; reprint, Chapel Hill, N.C., 1995), pp. xvii17Google Scholar.

50 On Disraeli and Judeophobia, see Feldman, , Englishmen and Jews, pp. 94120Google Scholar.

51 See, e.g., Reich, Emil, “The Jew-Baiting on the Continent,” Nineteenth Century 40 (September 1896): 422–38Google Scholar. As the Dictionary of National Biography entry on Reich notes, he “attached little to no importance to race in national history.” Dictionary of National Biography, 1901–11, 23:174–75Google Scholar. In The Jewish Question and the Mission of the Jews (1899), Charles Walston denied the existence of a Jewish race, except historically. Walston—an American born Waldstein in 1856-was an archaeologist. Between 1883 and 1889 he served as the director of the Fitzwilliam Museum, and between 1895 and 1901, he held the Slade Professorship of Fine Art at Cambridge University.

52 Smith, Goldwin, “The Jewish Question,” Nineteenth Century 10 (October 1881): 495Google Scholar; Adler, Hermann, “Jews and Judaism: A Rejoinder,” Nineteenth Century 4 (July 1878): 135Google Scholar. On Adler, see Black, , Social Politics, pp. 2829Google Scholar.

53 Salaman, Charles Kensington, Jews as They Are (London, 1885), pp. 9, 11Google Scholar.

54 Board of Trade, Alien Immigration: Reports on the Volume and Effects of Recent Immigration from Eastern Europe into the United Kingdom (London, 1894), p. 41n.Google Scholar; Jacobs, Joseph, Jewish Ideals and Other Essays (London, 1896), p. xiiGoogle Scholar.

55 White, Arnold, “Influence of Jews,” Academy and Literature 53 (1898): 342Google Scholar. On White, see Holmes, , Antisemitism in British Society, pp. 2426Google Scholar. Holmes notes a change in White from the 1880s through the 1890s as his antisemitism took on a racial character.

56 See, e.g., Blunt, John Elijah, A History of the Establishment and Residence of the Jews in England With An Enquiry into their Civil Disabilities (London, 1830), pp. 6566Google Scholar. For Gladstone, advocating the entrance of Jewish members into Parliament, Jews constituted “a very limited class in the nation.” See Gladstone, W. E., Substance of a Speech on the Motion of Lord John Russell for a Committee of the Whole House, with a View to the Removal of the Remaining Jewish Disabilities, House of Commons, 16 December 1847 (London, 1848), p. 7Google Scholar.

57 Stocking, George, Victorian Anthropology (New York, 1987), pp. 4853Google Scholar; Stepan, Idea of Race.

58 Avery, J. Gould, “Racial Characteristics, as Related to Civilisation,” Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland 1 (1873): 6364CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

59 Allen, Grant, review of Galton, Francis, Inquiries into Human Faculty and Its Development, Academy 24 (14 July 1883): 30Google Scholar. On eugenics, see Searle, G. R., Eugenics and Politics in Britain 1900–1914 (Leyden, 1976)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Soloway, Demography and Degeneration.

60 Early studies included Knox, Robert, Races of Man (1850)Google Scholar; Beddoe, John, “On the Physical Characteristics of the Jewish Race,” which was reprinted from Ethnological Transactions (London, 1861)Google Scholar; Sayce, A. H., “Language and Race,” Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland 5 (1876): 212–21CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Later studies include Neubauer, A., “Notes on the Race-Types of the Jews,” Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland 15 (1886): 1623CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Jacobs, Joseph, “On the Racial Characteristics of Modern Jews,” Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland 15 (1886): 2362CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Jacobs, Joseph and Spielman, Isidore, “On the Comparative Anthropometry of English Jews,” Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland 19 (1890): 7588CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

61 On early visual representations, see Shachar, Isaiah, “The Emergence of the Modern Pictorial Stereotype of ‘the Jews’ in England,” in Studies in the Cultural Life of the Jews in England, ed. Noy, Dov and Ben-Ami, Issachar, Folklore Research Center, Studies E (Jerusalem, 1975)Google Scholar; The Jews and Judaism: A Lecture by the Reverend Hugh McNeile, D.D. Delivered before the Young Men's Christian Association in Exeter Hall, 14 February 1854,” in Lectures Delivered before the Young Men's Christian Association (London, n.d.), p. 416Google Scholar.

62 “The Jews and Judaism.” On McNeile, , later the Dean of Ripon, see Hugh McNeile and Protestant Truth: “The Characteristics of Romanism and Protestantism,” with a biographical sketch by the Rev. Charles Bullock (London, n.d.)Google Scholar.

63 Schloss, David, “The Jew as a Workman,” The Nineteenth Century 29 (January 1891): 96109Google Scholar; Dyche, J. A., “The Jewish Workman,” Contemporary Review 73 (1898): 3550Google Scholar; White, Arnold, “A Typical Alien Immigrant,” Contemporary Review 73 (1898): 241–50Google Scholar; Dyche, J. A., “The Jewish Immigrant,” Contemporary Review 75 (1899): 379–99Google Scholar.

64 For a lucid account of the difficulties of interpreting the visual representations of the past, see Ockman, Carol, “When Is a Jewish Star Just a Star?” in The Jew in the Text: Modernity and the Construction of Identity, ed. Nochlin, Linda and Garb, Tamar (London, 1995), esp. p. 123Google Scholar.

65 Merrick, Leonard, Violet Moses (1891; reprint, New York, 1927), pp. 206–7Google Scholar.

66 For a good example, see Meredith, George, Tragic Comedians (1894; reprint, London, 1924), pp. 1921Google Scholar.

67 Morley, Charles, Studies in Board Schools (London, 1897), p. 200Google Scholar. These sketches first appeared in the Daily News. Morley served as the editor of the Pall Mall Magazine from 1905 to 1911.

68 See Nord, Deborah, Beatrice Webb's Apprenticeship, p. 275Google Scholar, n. 48. In her diary, Beatrice Potter first described Sidney Webb as having “a Jewish nose, prominent eyes and mouth, black hair” (14 February 1890). As Bryan Cheyette notes, Ezra Pound was rumored to be Jewish (p. 272). So, too, was Dr. Barnardo. On Barnardo, see McKnight, Gerald, The Scandal of Syrie Maugham (London, 1980), p. 19Google Scholar.

69 Unlike the Latin American mulatta, whose ability to pass in white society distinguished her from her male counterpart, Jewesses were not widely credited with any such facility. See Kutzinski, Vera, Sugar's Secrets: Race and the Erotics of Cuban Nationalism (Charlottesville, Va., 1993)Google Scholar.

70 Osgood, X.L. Julian, The Limb: An Episode of Adventure (London, 1896), esp. pp. 112–13Google Scholar.

71 Ragussis, , Figures of Conversion (n. 29 above), pp. 234–59Google Scholar.

72 Zangwill, Israel, Children of the Ghetto: A Study of a Peculiar People (New York, 1892), p. 407Google Scholar.

73 Merrick, , Violent Moses, p. 253Google Scholar.

74 The Scottish anatomist Robert Knox was the first British scientist to undertake a systematic study of the physical appearance of Jews. In his Races of Men (London, 1850)Google Scholar, Knox refuted the monogenist argument that racial differentiation reflected environment; race, he maintained, was innate. Although he identified three types of Jews, ranging from the “swarthy and “African” to the “darker” product of intermingled races, Jews, he asserted, were “never to be mistaken for a moment—never to be confounded with any other race” (p. 131). Passed through the blood, Jewish traits—among them, “high cheekbones; a sloping and disproportioned chin; an elongated, projecting mouth … a large, massive, club-shaped, hooked nose, three or four times larger than suits the face”—persisted despite intermarriage and conversion (p. 134). For the discerning observer, the proof of Jewishness, Knox alleged, was in the pudding: “in the long list of names of distinguished persons whom Mr. Disraeli has described as of Jewish descent, I have not met with a single Jewish trait in their countenance, in so far as I can discover; and, therefore, they are not Jews, nor of Jewish origins” (p. 140); emphasis in the original.

75 Jacobs, , “On the Racial Characteristics,” p. 50Google Scholar.

76 Ibid., p. 51.

77 Ibid., p. 50.

78 Fr.Galton, , “Mr. Fr. Galton on Generic Images and Automatic Representation,” Mind 4, no. 16 (October 1879): 551Google Scholar; Jacobs, , “On the Racial Characteristics,” p. 53Google Scholar.

79 Jacobs, , “On the Racial Characteristics,” p. 56Google Scholar.

80Jewish Question, 1882,” London Quarterly 59 (1882): 94119Google Scholar.

81 Gartner, Feldman, Englishmen and Jews, pp. 286–87Google Scholar; Gainer, , Alien Invasion, p. 13Google Scholar; Lloyd, , The Jewish Immigrant in England, 1870–1914 (Detroit, Mich., 1960)Google Scholar; Garrard, John, The English and Immigration, 1880–1910 (London, 1971)Google Scholar.

82 White, Arnold, review of Zangwill, , Dreamers of the Ghetto, Academy and Literature 53 (1898): 342Google Scholar.

83 White, Arnold, The Modern Jew (London, 1899), p. xviiGoogle Scholar. For a critical review of White, see The Dread of the Jew,” Spectator 83 (9 September 1899): 338–39Google Scholar.

84 d'Israeli, Isaac, The Genius of Judaism (London, 1833), p. 237Google Scholar. The book protests the social exclusiveness of modern Jewry, as well as its adherence to superstition.

85 Salaman, , Jews As They Are, p. 11Google Scholar.

86 Black, Social Politics; Williams, Bill, “‘East and West’ in Manchester Jewry, 1850–1914,” in Cesarani, , ed., Making of Modern Anglo-Jewry, esp. pp. 2122Google Scholar.

87 Adler, , “Jews and Judaism: A Rejoinder,” pp. 133–50Google Scholar.

88 Jacobs, Joseph, “Jewish Ideals,” Jewish Quarterly Review (July 1890): 505–6Google Scholar. This was a lecture delivered before the Ethical Society, 12 May 1889.

89 My thanks to Deborah Nord for this observation. Also see Malchow, , Gothic Images, pp. 126–66Google Scholar.

90 Board of Trade, Alien Immigration, p. 42Google Scholar.

91 The Just Pride of the Jew,” Spectator 88 (14 June 1902): 909Google Scholar.

92 Board of Trade, Alien Immigration, 43Google Scholar. In the second reading of the Aliens Bill, Sir Charles Dilke cited the Board of Trade's report: “‘The same individual within a few years excites the hostility of his English neighbours for his pauperism and their indignation for his wealth.” Hansard, 25 April 1904, p. 1071. See also Drage, Geoffrey, “Alien Immigration,” Journal of the Royal Statistical Society 58 (March 1895): 14CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

93 Russell, and Lewis, , The Jew in London, p. 34Google Scholar.

94 Charles Russell (1872–1917) was the principal of Patna College, India. See his Sonnets, Poems, and Translations, ed. Chapman, John Alexander (London, 1920)Google Scholar. An introductory memoir by Chapman comments on “the passion that made him search for truth everywhere.” “He hated the contentment with half-truths that is so common—those that partisanship or prejudice of any kind presents to men's minds as the whole.” “To search for truth, whether the abstract truth of philosophy, or truth in the practical affairs of men, was the occupation of Russell's life” (p. xv).

95 Russell, and Lewis, , The Jew in London, p. 3Google Scholar.

96 Gainer, Bernard, The Alien Invasion: The Origins of the Aliens Act of 1905 (London, 1972)Google Scholar.

97 Jewish Chronicle (26 August 1904), p. 27Google Scholar; (2 September 1904), p. 24.

98 Jewish Chronicle (16 September 1904), p. 8Google Scholar. On Jewish racialism, see Marrus, Michael, The Politics of Assimilation: A Study of the French Jewish Community at the Time of the Dreyfus Affair (Oxford, 1971), pp. 1027Google Scholar; Efron, Defenders of the Race, chap. 4; Goldstein, Feldman, Englishmen and Jews, pp. 122–26Google Scholar; Eric, , “‘Different Blood Flows in Our Veins’: Race and Jewish Self-Definition in Late Nineteenth Century America,” American Jewish History 85 (March 1997): 2955Google Scholar.

99 The question of gender is key here. While circumcision definitively identifies the Jewish male, there is no comparable physical marker for women.

100 Barzun, Stepan, Idea of Race, p. xvGoogle Scholar; Jacques, , Race: A Study in Superstition (1934; rev. ed., New York, 1965), p. xGoogle Scholar.

101 Stocking, , Race, Culture and Evolution, p. 44Google Scholar.

102 Nochlin, and Garb, , eds., The Jew in the Text, p. 23Google Scholar.

103 Cheyette, , Constructions of “The Jew,” p. 270Google Scholar.

104 Ragussis, , Figures of Conversion, p. 246Google Scholar.

105 Bauman, Zygmunt, “Allosemitism: Premodern, Modern, Postmodern,” in Modernity, Culture and the “Jew” ed. Cheyette, Bryan and Marcus, Laura (Cambridge, 1998), p. 144Google Scholar, and Modernity and the Holocaust (Cambridge, 1989), esp. pp. 4057Google Scholar.

106 Finkielkraut, Alain, The Imaginary Jew, trans. O'Neill, Kevin and Suchoff, David (1980; reprint, Lincoln, Nebr., 1994), p. 83Google Scholar.

107 Ibid, p. 69.

108 Bauman, , “Allosemitism,” p. 154Google Scholar.

109 Feldman, David, “Was Modernity Good for the Jews?” in Cheyette, and Marcus, , eds., ModernityGoogle Scholar.