Committed to a thoroughly relational understanding of subjectivity and group life, an ethical relationality respectful of both the singular and the universal, Frosh puts into revealing and complex conversation racism, antisemitism and, as grounding for understanding and combatting both of these 'isms,' an emancipatory psychoanalysis. Frosh argues that Judaism and emancipatory psychoanalysis share an ethical project that – crucially important in times like ours – resists all fundamentalisms. Introducing the reader to numerous philosophers, analysts, and political theorists, Frosh makes a compelling case for a 'solidarity of the oppressed.'