Read more
Between 2015 and 2020 the Labour Party was riven by allegations that the party had tolerated antisemitism. This important book by one of Britain's leading historians of anti-fascism gives a more detailed account than any yet published of what went wrong in Labour.
List of contents
1. Introduction 2. The Uniqueness of Antisemitism 3. Naz Shah and the Cause of Palestine 4. Ken Livingstone and the Crimes of Zionism 5. Jews and the Slave Trade 6. Seeing No Evil: Trump and the US Right 7. Seeing No Evil: Corbyn and the Mear One Mural 8. Jewdas and the Figure of the Bad Jew 9. The Labour Left and the Israel Lobby 10. The Labour Right and Anti-Zionist Jews 11. The Bullying of Luciana Berger 12. Fighting the Rich, Without Fighting Jews 13. From the Edge of the Anti-War Movement 14. Israel's Eastern European Allies 15. On Gatekeeping 16. Antisemitism and Black Emancipation 17. Conclusion
About the author
David Renton is a British historian and barrister. His other books include
No Free Speech for Fascists: Exploring 'No Platform' in History, Law and Politics (Routledge 2021) and
Never Again: Rock against Racism and the Anti- Nazi League 1976- 1982 (Routledge 2019).
Summary
Between 2015 and 2020 the Labour Party was riven by allegations that the party had tolerated antisemitism. This important book by one of Britain’s leading historians of anti-fascism gives a more detailed account than any yet published of what went wrong in Labour.
Additional text
"Many on the left won’t like this book, but everyone should read it if we are to do better in future." Mike Phipps, LabourHub.
"The definitive work for me on this most vexatious of subjects by the longstanding leftwing writer on fascism and antifascism, David Renton. Definitive in scope, politics and writing style this is a hugely impressive piece of writing and puts the Keir Starmer era Labour Party’s own pitiful efforts at antisemitism training to shame." - Mark Perryman, Philosophy Football.
"It was fair to expect the party under Corbyn to have acknowledged the challenge and taken its share of responsibility. David Renton's call to do just that makes his book a valuable contribution to the debate on left-wing antisemitism." - Keith Kahn Harris, Times Literary Supplement.
"David Renton’s excellent new book...demonstrates [that]acknowledging real antisemitism on our own side was absolutely necessary if we were to show that we were principled anti-racists. And, more importantly, if we were to be principled anti-racists." - Ian Saville, LabourHub.