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2 Transnational Antisemitic Networks and Political Christianity: The Catholic Participation in The Protocols of the Elders of Zion
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Chapters in this book
- Front Matter i
- Contents ix
- Figures xi
- Acknowledgments xiii
- Introduction 3
-
Theorizing Religion, Ethnonationalism, and Antisemitism
- Adopting the Swastika: George E. Deatherage and the American Nationalist Confederation, 1937–1942 23
- Transnational Antisemitic Networks and Political Christianity: The Catholic Participation in The Protocols of the Elders of Zion 48
- Julius Evola and the “Jewish Problem” in Axis Europe: Race, Religion, and Antisemitism 72
-
Supporting Ethnonationalist Efforts
- German Catholicism’s Lost Opportunity to Confront Antisemitism before the Machtergreifung 95
- The Fate of John’s Gospel during the Third Reich 121
- Nationalism and Religious Bonds: Transatlantic Religious Communities in Nazi Germany and the United States 151
- “Often you end up asking yourself, could there be a great secret group of Jews behind it all.” – Antisemitism in the Finnish Lutheran Church after the First World War 174
- “The Converts Were Just Delighted”: Dynamics of Religious Conversion as a Tool of Genocide in the Independent State of Croatia 209
-
Critiquing Ethnonationalism and Antisemitism
- Learning as a Space of Protection: The Hochschule für die Wissenschaft des Judentums in Nazi Berlin 245
- Ethnonationalism as a Theological Crisis: Metropolitan Andrey Sheptytsky and the Greek Catholic Church in Western Ukraine, 1923–1944 274
- To Murder or Save Thy Neighbour? Romanian Orthodox Clergymen and Jews during the Holocaust (1941–1945) 305
- Racist, Brutal, and Ethnotheist: A Conservative Christian View of Nazism in the Korntal Brethren 331
- Ecumenical Protestant Responses to the Rise of Nazism, Fascism, and Antisemitism During the 1920s and 1930s 356
- Afterword 379
- Contributors 387
- Index 393
Chapters in this book
- Front Matter i
- Contents ix
- Figures xi
- Acknowledgments xiii
- Introduction 3
-
Theorizing Religion, Ethnonationalism, and Antisemitism
- Adopting the Swastika: George E. Deatherage and the American Nationalist Confederation, 1937–1942 23
- Transnational Antisemitic Networks and Political Christianity: The Catholic Participation in The Protocols of the Elders of Zion 48
- Julius Evola and the “Jewish Problem” in Axis Europe: Race, Religion, and Antisemitism 72
-
Supporting Ethnonationalist Efforts
- German Catholicism’s Lost Opportunity to Confront Antisemitism before the Machtergreifung 95
- The Fate of John’s Gospel during the Third Reich 121
- Nationalism and Religious Bonds: Transatlantic Religious Communities in Nazi Germany and the United States 151
- “Often you end up asking yourself, could there be a great secret group of Jews behind it all.” – Antisemitism in the Finnish Lutheran Church after the First World War 174
- “The Converts Were Just Delighted”: Dynamics of Religious Conversion as a Tool of Genocide in the Independent State of Croatia 209
-
Critiquing Ethnonationalism and Antisemitism
- Learning as a Space of Protection: The Hochschule für die Wissenschaft des Judentums in Nazi Berlin 245
- Ethnonationalism as a Theological Crisis: Metropolitan Andrey Sheptytsky and the Greek Catholic Church in Western Ukraine, 1923–1944 274
- To Murder or Save Thy Neighbour? Romanian Orthodox Clergymen and Jews during the Holocaust (1941–1945) 305
- Racist, Brutal, and Ethnotheist: A Conservative Christian View of Nazism in the Korntal Brethren 331
- Ecumenical Protestant Responses to the Rise of Nazism, Fascism, and Antisemitism During the 1920s and 1930s 356
- Afterword 379
- Contributors 387
- Index 393