Monsieur Judas: A Paradox

Monsieur Judas: A Paradox

Author: Fergus Hume

Publisher: Good Press

Published: 2019-12-09

Total Pages: 182

ISBN-13:

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'Monsieur Judas: A Paradox' is a detective mystery novel by author Fergus Hume. The sleepy little town of Jarchester is rattled when a guest at the inn, barely a week into town, is found dead in his room. London based detective Octavious Fanks is called in to investigate, and before long the death is ruled as a suicide. But before leaving town, Fanks by a strange coincidence meets his old schoolmate Roger Axton. Even stranger is the reason that he gives Fanks for being in town. It turns out that he was in pursuit of his love interest, who comes from the same town as the town indicated on the dead man's pills through which he ended his life. Now the detective is not so sure that the deceased took his own life, and wonders what Roger has to do with the whole matter...


The Medieval Archive of Antisemitism in Nineteenth-Century Sweden

The Medieval Archive of Antisemitism in Nineteenth-Century Sweden

Author: Cordelia Heß

Publisher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG

Published: 2021-12-20

Total Pages: 215

ISBN-13: 3110757435

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The significance of religion for the development of modern racist antisemitism is a much debated topic in the study of Jewish-Christian relations. This book, the first study on antisemitism in nineteenth-century Sweden, provides new insights into the debate from the specific case of a country in which religious homogeneity was the considered ideal long into the modern era. Between 1800 and 1900, approximately 150 books and pamphlets were printed in Sweden on the subject of Judaism and Jews. About one third comprised of translations mostly from German, but to a lesser extent also from French and English. Two thirds were Swedish originals, covering all genres and topics, but with a majority on religious topics: conversion, supersessionism, and accusations of deicide and bloodlust. The latter stem from the vastly popular medieval legends of Ahasverus, Pilate, and Judas which were printed in only slightly adapted forms and accompanied by medieval texts connecting these apocryphal figures to contemporary Jews, ascribing them a physical, essential, and biological coherence and continuity – a specific Jewish temporality shaped in medieval passion piety, which remained functional and intelligible in the modern period. Relying on medieval models and their combination of religious and racist imagery, nineteenth-century debates were informed by a comprehensive and mostly negative "knowledge" about Jews.