Navigating Catastrophe in Cinema of Jewish Experience: Five Studies in Mass Media and Mass Destruction
By (Author) Joel Rosenberg
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
19th March 2026
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Hardback
220
Width 152mm, Height 229mm
Provides in-depth analysis of six films of Jewish experience made between 1899 and 1947, exploring their relation to what the authors calls the "era of catastrophe," which is defined as 1914-45a time that witnessed the two World Wars, a burgeoning of stateless peoples, wide-spread political polarization, the rise of fascist and totalitarian regimes; radical antisemitism and other ethnic hatreds; mass slaughter of peoples, classes, and political enemies; and often cutthroat battles for control of mass media, popular culture, and, however battered, the public sphere.
The author analyzes the film depiction of Jewish experience to assess the public mood in certain civil societies that witnessed the rise and fall of Nazism and the advent of the Holocaust. The films analyzed are: LAffaire Dreyfus (1899); The Golem: How He Came into the World (1920); The Dybbuk (1937); To Be or Not To Be (1942); and Gentlemans Agreement (1947)the last read in tandem with its film-noir alter-ego of the same year, Crossfire. The author explores the films in the reverse historical order pursued in the present study: (1) early postwar America; (2) America upon its entry into World War II; (3) inter-War Polish Jewry; (4) the World War I era and the early Weimar period in Germany; and (5) the rise of political antisemitism in fin de sicle France. By looking at how Jewish experience was comprehended in key films at those junctures, one can learn a great deal about a period of profound historical crisis, whose turmoil expressed the larger crises of modernity itself.
Joel Rosenberg is associate professor of International Literary and Cultural Studies, and Director of Judaic Studies at Tufts University.