Michael Carter-Sinclair
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This chapter draws together key points from previous chapters and presents conclusions about the roles played by various Christian Socials and those associated with them in the origins and development of organised, political antisemitism in Vienna. It reiterates the point that the Christian Socials began as a Viennese bourgeois protest movement, and that their history is specific to the particular circumstances of Vienna. The chapter compares conclusions reached in this work with those of previous narratives, especially concerning the motivations of those who became involved in campaigning. It reiterates that the Christian Social movement, including large swathes of the Viennese clergy, had, at its heart, an authoritarianism that rejected pluralism. The chapter adds that some previous histories seem to have left little room for doubt and uncertainty, so this work gives a few examples of where analysis would benefit from seeing a grey rather than a black-and-white picture. The work concludes by looking at a how deep-seated antisemitism in Vienna left a legacy that contributed to the destruction of Jewish Vienna.

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Vienna’s ‘respectable’ antisemites

A study of the Christian Social movement

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