History of Antisemitism in The United States - Nineteenth Century

Nineteenth Century

According to Peter Knight, throughout most of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, the United States rarely experienced antisemitic action comparable to the sort that was endemic in Europe during the same period.

Read more about this topic:  History Of Antisemitism In The United States

Famous quotes related to nineteenth century:

    Well, well, Henry James is pretty good, though he is of the nineteenth century, and that glaringly.
    Robert Louis Stevenson (1850–1894)

    The taste for freedom, the fashion and cult of happiness of the majority, that the nineteenth century is infatuated with was only a heresy in his eyes that would pass like others.
    Stendhal [Marie Henri Beyle] (1783–1842)

    If the nineteenth century was the age of the editorial chair, ours is the century of the psychiatrist’s couch.
    Marshall McLuhan (1911–1980)

    In the nineteenth century ... explanations of who and what women were focused primarily on reproductive events—marriage, children, the empty nest, menopause. You could explain what was happening in a woman’s life, it was believed, if you knew where she was in this reproductive cycle.
    Grace Baruch (20th century)

    Why does he not know how to select servants? The ordinary procedure of the nineteenth century is that when a powerful and noble personage encounters a man of feeling, he kills, exiles, imprisons or so humiliates him that the other, like a fool, dies of grief.
    Stendhal [Marie Henri Beyle] (1783–1842)