Michael Carter-Sinclair
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To the brink of power, 1889–95
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The chapter analyses how the political systems of the day, restricting voting rights to a small minority of the population, worked to the advantage of antisemitic activists. These activists continued to develop political organisations, using the word ‘Christian’ to indicate that they were not Jewish and therefore, in their eyes, not liberal. Claims by activists among the clergy that they were reacting to their ill treatment by the liberal state are found to be wanting. This is a crucial point, as these claims are often held up in other works as key motivating factors for the antisemitism of the clergy. In this work, such claims are shown as secondary to a deep-seated antimodernism, and a desire to make the Catholic Church the supreme moral arbiter in the state, something which could only be implemented in a modern, pluralist world by an authoritarian state. The chapter shows how the senior clergy of Vienna played a part in the rise of politically organised antisemitism.

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Vienna’s ‘respectable’ antisemites

A study of the Christian Social movement

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