In The Impossibility of Anti-Zionism, Lilia Frankenthal takes readers on a historical, legal, and moral examination of Jewish self-determination. The book traces the millennia-old connection between the Jewish people and the Land of Israel, exploring ancient Judea, the Diaspora, centuries of persecution, religious, racial, and political antisemitism, the Holocaust, modern Zionism, the establishment of the State of Israel, and the conflicts that shaped its consolidation.
In its second part, the book examines the transition from hatred to law, and from law to legal accountability. It analyzes anti-Jewish legislation, the Nuremberg Laws, the Nuremberg Trials, the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, crimes against humanity, contemporary legal frameworks addressing antisemitism, the Brazilian legal approach to the subject, and the limits of freedom of expression when it ceases to protect ideas and instead becomes a vehicle for discrimination, dehumanization, or the incitement of hatred.
Drawing on history, international law, criminology, and Brazilian case law, the author examines how anti-Zionist discourse reproduces, in numerous contexts, longstanding patterns of antisemitism under a new vocabulary.
This work is also available in Portuguese (O Antissionismo Impossível) and Spanish (El Antisionismo Imposible).
| ISBN | 9786502217832 |
| Número de páginas | 751 |
| Edição | 1 (2026) |
| Formato | 16x23 (160x230) |
| Acabamento | Brochura c/ orelha |
| Tipo de papel | Offset 90g |
| Idioma | Inglês |
Tem algo a reclamar sobre este livro? Envie um email para atendimento@clubedeautores.com.br
Faça o login deixe o seu comentário sobre o livro.