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Off-White

The Truth About Antisemitism

ebook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 4 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 4 weeks
Why can't we talk about antisemitism?

'I cannot wait for Off-White to be read, debated and put into practice.' Naomi Klein, author of Doppelganger

As claims of antisemitism continue to distort our politics at home and abroad, it has become almost impossible to talk about constructively, even in private. Instead, we find ourselves in a storm of misinformation, political mudslinging and bad-faith accusations.

There is, however, a way to deliberate more honestly. Looking beyond our polarising headlines and interrogating the reasons racism takes hold, Off-White offers urgent analysis of one of the most divisive issues of our time. Taking in the contingency of whiteness, Judeo-Christian mythmaking, pro-Israel antisemitism, and the Palestinian struggle against colonialism, Rachel Shabi lights a hopeful way forward.

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'Timely and valuable... [Shabi's] key message is a vital one – that the fight against antisemitism is an essential part of the fight against all injustice and dehumanisation.' Observer, Book of the Week

'A masterpiece defined by moral clarity, humanity and insight.' Owen Jones

'An invaluable guide for anyone who seeks to understand issues over which we stumble far too often.' George Monbiot

'With a generous spirit and a humane compass, Rachel Shabi guides us through a minefield.' Gary Younge
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    • Kirkus

      January 15, 2025
      Moving beyond "blind spots and biases." Shabi's potent book explores the nature of Jewish identity from the personal perspective of a British woman of Iraqi Jewish heritage. Her central argument is that race is a social construct, that the association of skin color with race is a cultural convention, and that "racism itself creates race--and not the other way around." The book pivots around what Shabi, a journalist and author, calls a "category error." She writes, "The history of Jewish people in the West, persecuted, killed and then, finally, absorbed into white majorities, is not only a story of antisemitism. It is itself a story about the fakery of whiteness. That we can't agree on whether or not Jews are white does not tell us that Jewish people are hard to categorise. It tells us, again and again, that racial categories are specious." Building on this idea, the author draws on her experience as someone who sometimes presents as white and sometimes is taken for a person of color. This is less a book about antisemitism itself than a book about how charges of antisemitism have become the weaponry of both right- and left-wing politics. The author spends much time reviewing the academic critique of "settler colonialism" as it applies to Israel. We should recognize, she writes, the origins of Zionism in the long-standing antisemitism of Europe while at the same time condemning "the injustices perpetrated by the state of Israel." Then again, she writes, "antisemitism is not surfacing because of ever-growing and justified criti-cisms of Israel. It is coming up because [of] centuries-old patterns and structures of antisemitism." While this is not a subtle book, it may help us understand how we have learned to talk the way we do about Jewish identity in the 21st century. A passionate reinterpretation of antisemitism.

      COPYRIGHT(2025) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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