Barricades and Banners: The Revolution of 1905 and the Transformation of Warsaw Jewry. By Scott Ury. Stanford Studies in Jewish History and Culture. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2012. xxvii, 415 pp. Appendix. Notes. Bibliography. Chronology. Glossary. Index. Illustrations. Photographs. Table. Maps. $60.00, hard bound.

Slavic Review ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 72 (3) ◽  
pp. 607-609
Author(s):  
Gershon Bacon
2019 ◽  
pp. 57-78
Author(s):  
Robert Chazan

This chapter considers Salo Baron's writings on Jewish history. Recent historians have come to reject the supernaturally grounded assumption of unending Jewish suffering during the supposed third exile; many of them have also distanced themselves from the modern and naturalistic continuations of this sense of interminable Jewish suffering. The first major challenge to the received wisdom came in 1928 from Salo Baron, newly arrived in the United States from his native Europe. In an essay titled “Ghetto and Emancipation: Shall We Revisit the Traditional View?” he undertook a fairly limited assault on traditional Jewish thinking about exilic pain. Focusing on the French Revolution and the beginnings of the process of emancipation of Western Jewry, Baron examined the centuries immediately preceding the revolution and the immediate post-Emancipation period. He argued that the former was nowhere near so horrific as usually projected and that the latter was nowhere near so idyllic.


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