Replacing “anti-Semitism” with “antisemitism”

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ASPartOfMe
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07 Dec 2021, 5:34 pm

NYTimes replaces ‘anti-Semitism’ with ‘antisemitism’ in updated style guidance

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Following the example of a number of publications that have made the switch in recent months, The New York Times has updated its style guide to replace “anti-Semitism” with “antisemitism,” Jewish Insider has learned.

The change, which removes the hyphen and lowercases the first S, comes in response to a growing chorus of Jewish activists who have argued that the traditional usage distorts the true meaning of the term.

The paper made no public announcement of the switch, which was formally adopted in August, according to Phil Corbett, the associate managing editor for standards at the Times.

While the new spelling by the paper of record may seem merely cosmetic, it reflects a deeper linguistic debate that has long been brewing within the Jewish community.
In 2015, the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance began advocating for “antisemitism” over “anti-Semitism” — a term popularized in the late 1800s by the right-wing German polemicist Wilhelm Marr — out of concern that the “hyphenated spelling allows for the possibility of something called ‘Semitism.’”

That idea “not only legitimizes a form of pseudo-scientific racial classification that was thoroughly discredited by association with Nazi ideology,” the IHRA said at the time, “but also divides the term, stripping it from its meaning of opposition and hatred toward Jews.”

With the publication of Antisemitism: Here and Now in 2019, Deborah Lipstadt, the Holocaust historian who was recently nominated to be the Biden administration’s special envoy to monitor and combat antisemitism, helped introduce the discussion to a wider audience.

“It should be spelled as one word,” she said in an interview with JI two years ago. “Its inventor wanted it to mean one thing and one thing only: Jew hatred. He coined this word because he want his word to encompass, not just Jews who are religious, but Jews who have abandoned all links to the religion. He wanted to depict Jews as a metaphysical enemy.”

The Anti-Defamation League also favors the un-hyphenated usage, arguing that the spelling is “the best way to refer to hatred toward Jews.”

Over the past year, mainstream media outlets have followed suit, including BuzzFeed and The Associated Press, the latter of which publishes a style guide that is widely consulted across journalism. Both publications adopted the new spelling in April. (JI switched to “antisemitism” in March of 2019.)


With all the problems Jews are facing these days this is what people are spending time on? Oy Vey.

So lets have a Jew Hater define terms for us, that will show ‘em.

Besides anti-Jewish is more literal than then the other two.

Mishugana


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naturalplastic
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08 Dec 2021, 7:10 am

Terms tend to get streamlined over time.

"Country and Western music" is now called "Country".

"Rock and Roll Music" is now called "Rock".

So its not surprising that the cumbersome "anti-semitism" would finally be respelled as "antisemitism".

But it is an odd expression.

Jews were hated in the Middle Ages mainly because they didnt convert to Christianity. But in the Nineteenth Century it could be a matter of blood as well as about religion, if not moreso. So a German writer invented the term "antisemitism" to cover both kinds of hatred of Jews (religious kind, and the racial hatred kind). In the Nineteenth Century Jews were the only large group of folks of Semitic origin.

The problem is that in the late 20th Century Europe got many immigrants from Arab countries (and to a lesser degree the US did too). And Arabs are also "Semites". And Arabs and Jews came into conflict with each other resulting from the creation of the state of Israel. So that renders the term "antisemitism" obsolete because of the lexical problems and contradictions it creates.

Some White folks of European ancestry hate both Jews AND Arabs...because both of the later ARE Arabs and Jews. So those folks would truly be "antisemitic". Or maybe not. If the reason for your hatred is that you associate Arabs with Islam, and Jews with Judaism, and you want both racial groups to convert to Christianity then...your hatred would be motivated by religion and not blood/race. So would that make you "antisemitic"?

But what if you hate Jews, but not hate Arabs. Or vice versa? Would that still make you an "antisemite"?

And what if you were yourself an Arab who hated Jews? Or were a Jew who hated Arabs? Would either thing make you yourself "a Semite who was antisemitic"? And can folks of Semitic background be considered "antisemitic"?



kraftiekortie
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08 Dec 2021, 9:18 am

This is just semantic "splitting of hairs." Both spellings mean being against "Semitic people and ideas," and used exclusively for being against Jews and their ideas, rather than other Semitic peoples.

I agree with APOM: there's more important things to think about.

This is rather like somebody being "woke" just for the sake of being "woke."



naturalplastic
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08 Dec 2021, 12:32 pm

Hmm...didnt realize that Wilhelm Marr advocated the thing that he coined the word for. Thought maybe he was an impartial observer.

The article links to another interesting article about Marr.

So yes we are just respelling a term for Jew-hatred that a Jew hater invented. Letting a hater define the terms.

He wasnt just observing "trends in hatred around him" but apparently wanted Germans to... stop hating Jews just because they arent Christians, and to start hating them by blood.



Mona Pereth
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08 Dec 2021, 7:05 pm

Why not just refer to people who hate Jews as "Jew haters" or "anti-Jewish bigots"?

Using the term "antisemitism" to mean "hatred of Jews" is itself an implied slight to Arabs, who are Semites too.


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