In this Book

The Blood Libel Legend: A Casebook in Anti-Semitic Folklore

Book
Alan Dundes
1991
summary

Alan Dundes, in this casebook of an anti-Semitic legend, demonstrates the power of folklore to influence thought and history.  According to the blood libel legend, Jews murdered Christian infants to obtain blood to make matzah.  Dundes has gathered here the work of leading scholars who examine the varied sources and elaborations of the legend.   Collectively, their essays constitute a forceful statement against this false accusation. 
      The legend is traced from the murder of William of Norwich in 1144, one of the first reported cases of ritualized murder attributed to Jews, through nineteenth-century Egyptian reports, Spanish examples, Catholic periodicals, modern English instances,  and twentieth-century American cases.  The essays deal not only with historical cases and surveys of blood libel in different  locales, but also with literary renditions of the legend, including the ballad “Sir Hugh, or, the Jew’s Daughter” and Chaucer’s “The Prioress’s Tale.” 
    These case studies provide a comprehensive view of the complex nature of the blood libel legend.  The concluding section of the volume includes an analysis of the legend that focuses on Christian misunderstanding of the Jewish feast of Purim and the child abuse component of the legend and that attempts to bring psychoanalytic theory to bear on the content of the blood libel legend.  The final essay by Alan Dundes takes a distinctly folkloristic approach, examining the legend as part of the  belief system that Christians developed about Jews.
    This study of the blood libel legend will interest folklorists, scholars of Catholicism and Judaism, and many general readers, for it is both the literature and the history of anti-Semitism.

Table of Contents

Cover

Title Page

Copyright

Contents

pp. v-vi

Preface

pp. vii-viii

Acknowledgments

pp. ix

Thomas of Monmouth: Detector of Ritual Murder

pp. 3-40

Little St. Hugh of Lincoln: Researches in History, Archaeology, and Legend

pp. 41-71

Little Sir Hugh: An Analysis

pp. 72-90

The Prioress's Tale

pp. 91-98

The Ritual Murder Accusation in Britain

pp. 99-134

The Hilsner Affair

pp. 135-161

The Present State of the Ritual Crime in Spain

pp. 162-179

Damascus to Kiev: Civiltà Cattolica on Ritual Murder

pp. 180-196

Ritual Murder Accusations in Nineteenth-Century Egypt

pp. 197-232

Twentieth-Century Blood Libels in the United States

pp. 233-260

The Feast of Purim and the Origins of the Blood Accusation

pp. 261-272

The Blood Libel: A Motif in the History of Childhood

pp. 273-303

The Ritual Murder Accusation: The Persistence of Doubt and the Repetition Compulsion

pp. 304-335

The Ritual Murder or Blood Libel Legend: A Study of Anti-Semitic Victimization through Projective Inversion

pp. 336-378

A Selected Bibliography: Suggestions for Further Reading on the Blood Libel Legend

pp. 379-382

Index

pp. 383-385
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