Blacks, Jews and the racial imagination in the writings of Sephardim in the long seventeenth century

Author: Jonathan Schorsch

Source: Jewish History, Volume 19, Number 1, January 2005 , pp. 109-135(27)

Publisher: Springer

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Abstract:

This essay explores facets of the Sephardic racial imagination. Early Modern Catholic Iberian discourse generally scorned Jews and linked them, implicitly and sometimes explicitly, with denigrated Africans, or Blacks. Marginalized and often persecuted, conversos and Sephardim of the sixteenth through the eighteenth century resorted to hegemonic discourse about Blacks to construct their own identity. Central to Sephardic discourse about Blacks was its redemptive logic. In both Iberian Catholic and northwest-European Protestant colonial spheres, conversos and Sephardim sought through anti-Blackness to identity themselves (and hopefully for others to identify them) as members of the dominant White culture and ruling class, their religious otherness aside.

Document Type: Research article

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10835-005-4360-0

Affiliations: 1: Department of Religion, Columbia University, USA,

Publication date: 2005-01-01

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