William Lee Frost Professor of Jewish History, Harvard University; Resident Faculty & Seminar Chair, Minda de Gunzburg Center for European Studies, Harvard University; Director, The Center for Jewish Studies, Harvard University
November 5, 2021
12:00pm - 1:00pm
Virtual/RSVP Required
The mid-1920s brought stability to Poland and sped the
assimilation of its three million Jews. But already in the late 1920s, many
began to believe that there was little prospect of a decent future for Europe’s
largest Jewish community, an outlook fueled by newly confident antisemitism and the flourishing of
political pathologies across liberal Europe.
Looking beyond familiar histories of Zionism and Diasporism, Kenneth Moss will discuss how
analysts in both movements groped toward new understandings of the powers and
trajectories of illiberal politics and the prospects of “minorityhood.” As some refocused on shoring up the besieged Jewish subject,
others were driven toward a triage politics marked by post-ideological
relations to Palestine and new forms of reasoning about communal and individual
salvageability.
This lecture recaptures a world of Jewish thought and praxis
defined less by ideological certainties than by felt danger and acknowledged
incapacity. Its history is part of the unfinished global history of
progressivism’s halting effort to comprehend the unexpected powers of
enmity-politics and of the special predicaments facing minority communities and
individuals living in the shadow thereof.