Limit search to available items
Book Cover
E-book
Author Goska, Danusha V

Title Bieganski : the Brute Polak Stereotype in Polish-Jewish Relations and American Popular Culture
Published Academic Studies Press, 2010

Copies

Description 1 online resource
Series Jews of Poland
Contents Bieganski lives -- Bieganski in the press -- Bieganski takes root in America -- Bieganski in American cinema -- Bieganski as a support for Jewish identity -- The peasant and middleman minority theory -- The necessity of Bieganski : a shamed and horrified world seeks a scapegoat -- Interviews -- Bieganski lives -- next door to Shylock -- Final thoughts
Summary In this study, Goska exposes one stereotype of Poles and other Eastern Europeans. In the "Bieganski" stereotype, Poles exhibit the qualities of animals. They are strong, stupid, violent, fertile, anarchic, dirty, and especially hateful in a way that more evolved humans are not. Their special hatefulness is epitomized by Polish anti- Semitism. Bieganski discovers this stereotype in the mainstream press, in scholarship and film, in Jews' self-definition, and in responses to the Holocaust. Bieganski's twin is Shylock, the stereotype of the crafty, physically inadequate, moneyed Jew. The final chapters of the book are devoted to interviews with American Jews, which reveal that Bieganski--and Shylock--are both alive and well among those who have little knowledge of Poles or Poland
Notes In English
Print version record
Subject Antisemitism -- Poland -- History -- 20th century
Stereotypes (Social psychology) -- Poland -- History -- 20th century
Ethnicity -- Poland -- History -- 20th century
Jews -- Poland -- Public opinion -- History -- 20th century
Jews -- United States -- Public opinion
Polish people -- United States -- Public opinion
Stereotypes (Social psychology) -- United States
Popular culture -- United States.
SOCIAL SCIENCE / Jewish Studies.
Antisemitism.
Ethnic relations.
Ethnicity.
Jews -- Public opinion.
Popular culture.
Stereotypes (Social psychology)
SUBJECT Poland -- Ethnic relations -- History -- 20th century
United States -- Ethnic relations. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85140043
Subject Poland.
United States.
Genre/Form History.
Form Electronic book
ISBN 1306153050
9781306153058
9781618110251
161811025X