On June 13 I will hold my first public lecture as Marko Feingold fellow in Salzburg. See below for the invitation. Please contact me if you want a link to follow the lecture online.
“The ‘Judensau’: Ancient Roots of an Antisemitic Concept”
The so-called Judensau is the most well-known, and most prevailing, anti-Jewish motif in the German-speaking countries in the 13th-16th century. It is found on stone reliefs, in wood cuttings, on churches and public buildings, and later in printed works. The effect of this imagery, which identifies Jews with pigs, has unfortunately not ended with the Middle Ages. The public display of such images is now forbidden, or, when found on old buildings, accompanied with historical information. Yet the anti-Jewish use of the pig pertains, hidden and less hidden, specifically today when antisemitism is more alive than ever. This lecture focuses on the origins of the Judensauimage, and similar motifs, in Biblical, ancient Christian and ancient Jewish sources, and their Wirkungsgeschichte in the Middle Ages until today.