Hatemail
is probably the most bizarre book to ever grace a coffee table.
Oversized, gorgeous, and with vivid and full-color matte printing, it's
packed with turn-of-the-century art and extensive scholarly
commentary...about anti-Semitic picture postcards.
There's an
1899 German postcard that depicts a trio of "Glucksschwein," Jews
dressed up as pigs, which is a visual pun on the meaning of the word (it
means "lucky charms" and "lucky pigs"). A 1907 cartoon touts the
"competition of fierce animals, division of misers, first prize" to an
effeminate-looking mouse that bears striking similarity to Art
Spiegelman's creation.
Some of these items you can easily picture
people laughing at, like a novelty postcard in a downtown dollar-store
today. Others, like a Jew using a machine to squeeze money out of
gentiles, are more sinister. And some are out-and-out propaganda, like a
1910 nursery-rhyme—a long nursery rhyme—about a Jewish boy who begs his
father for an umbrella, then is horrified that they must pay for it. As
a historical document, Hatemail is rare, surreal and valuable.
But we're still not sure we'd want it in our living rooms.
- Matthue Roth for Jewniverse
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