Breaks fresh ground, especially in the section on Austria… [It is]
a valuable contribution to the historiography of modern Germany…
Full of fascinating facts and figures and information about, for
instance, the social composition of the pan-German associations…
Indispensable for any serious student of nineteenth- and
twentieth-century Europe.
*New York Review of Books*
Should become the standard account of anti-Semitism as a political
movement in Central Europe… The value of the book lies both in its
completeness and in the clarity of its analyses… [Pulzer] has made
a most important, indeed indispensable, contribution to our
understanding of modern anti-Semitism.
*American Historical Review*
A learned and significant examination of modern anti-Semitism…
Pulzer has assembled a great quantity of highly interesting and
instructive material and has served it up succinctly and in the
best academic fashion.
*Journal of Politics*
The most persuasive case yet presented that the crucial period in
the development of the movement that was to perpetrate such horrors
after Hitler came to power in Germany was that which stretched from
1867 to 1914.
*American Oxonian*
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