'This is a tour-de-force of historical scholarship and cultural meditation. Beginning with the simple observation that the career of anti-Semitism unfolds as a dialectic between two opposed but symbiotic figures”the Jew-Devil and the Jew-Sissy”Biberman provides startling readings of some of the major texts in the Western Canon and deepens our understanding of the protean and indestructible thing that anti-Semitism is. Biberman's knowledge of sources and of critical commentary is astounding, but even more astounding is his ability to at once synthesize and appropriate the work of his predecessors and to go beyond it in surprising but persuasive ways. One measure of his success is the fact that two-thirds of the way through the book the reader can accept as obvious and inevitable the conclusion that the latest representative figure of the demonic/effeminate Jew is Osama bin Laden, the Islamic terrorist, who in Biberman's reading is himself the heir of Mary Shelley's Frankenstein monster and Bram Stroker's Dracula. Now there's an unlikely thesis, but one that Biberman renders entirely convincing. A major achievement.' Stanley Fish, Dean, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, University of Illinois at Chicago 'Timely, cogent and forcefully argued... With this book, Matthew Biberman joins a group of critics who illuminate the peculiar vicissitudes of religious discourse in the creation and criticism of Western literature.' Julia Reinhard Lupton, Associate Professor of English and Comparative Literature, University of California-Irvine 'Adroit at reading this anti-Semitic tropology in and into a great variety of writings, Biberman's study is most provocative in its attention to what it calls the 'anti-Semitic aesthetics' of the modern literary-critical establisment... Biberman's study stays [...] consistently energized by the horrifying logic propelling the narrative of anti-Semitism through modern times.' Renaissance Quarterly '... there is much to praise in th