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Anti-Semitism in the United States

Chapter 15: TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE
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About This Book

A sociological study first lays out a theory of group psychology and intergroup contact, then applies it to American history to explain patterns of intolerance toward Jews. It traces religious and social prejudices, the emergence of racialist anti-Jewish movements after the World War, and related reactions such as the Ku Klux Klan; it examines responses organized against anti-Semitism and concludes with reflections on prospects for tolerance and the development of the American over-group. Chapters combine theoretical analysis with historical application to account for causes, expressions, and possible remedies for anti-Jewish sentiment in the United States.

TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE

New original cover art included with this eBook is granted to the public domain.

Misspelled words have been corrected. These are identified by dashed underlining in the text. Archaic and alternate spellings are left unchanged (e.g. neurones, synagog).

Footnote superscripts have been renumbered and the footnotes moved to the end of the text.

The HTML version of the eBook displays the original printed page numbers in square brackets in the right margin.

Quotation marks and punctuation have been silently corrected.

Chapter III in the original text is missing a title for section 3.

The following corrections have been applied to the text:

Page Source Correction Edit distance
11 thory theory 1
fn 39 Raches Races 1
91 montony monotony 1
95 standarized standardized 1
100 American Jws American Jews 1
108 peronality personality 1
114 reenforced reinforced 1