Shalom Lappin is Professor of Natural Language Processing at Queen Mary University of London, and Emeritus Professor of Computational Linguistics at King’s College London.
""This fine book has found its terrible moment. Shalom Lappin helps us to recognize, understand and fight against the menace of antisemitism."" Michael Walzer, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton University ""A deep and thoughtful analysis of a pernicious phenomenon that has made a tragic reappearance in intellectual life."" Steven Pinker, Johnstone Family Professor of Psychology at Harvard University and author of Rationality ""The New Antisemitism is beautifully written and theoretically brilliant. Lappin addresses the toxic, intimate relationship between antisemitism and global inequality, and analyses the pernicious, parallel role of the left and the right in fostering antisemitism worldwide. Unfortunately, I can’t think of a more timely book."" Susie Linfield, Professor of Journalism at New York University and author of The Lions’ Den: Zionism and the Left from Hannah Arendt to Noam Chomsky ""Much writing on contemporary antisemitism is limited by treating it as a free-floating discourse, by engaging only one expression of it - left, right or religious – and by despairing about the prospect of defeating it. Lappin’s book offers us a critical and global political economy of contemporary antisemitism, a historically grounded account of its spread across the left and right, and a course set on hope: a new progressive politics that, by leaning into class, focusing on socializing globalization, and stimulating new social solidarities, can tear antisemitism up by the roots."" Alan Johnson, editor of Mapping Left Antisemitism: The Fathom Essays “An evenhanded examination of how the ‘massive instability unleashed by decades of intensifying economic inequality’ has exacerbated forces of age-old antisemitism. … A well-reasoned, coolheaded argument that could be used fruitfully in current roiling debates.” Kirkus Reviews “Offers a superb primer of antisemitism’s past and a sharp analysis of its present state… It is a remarkable book... A marvelously clear and cogent analysis of contemporary antisemitism.” The Forward