American Jews have a powerful cultural narrative that seemingly speaks
on their behalf. According to this narrative, Eastern European Jewish
immigrants built the film industry in the first decade of this century
and dominated it by the second. As opposed to determining a particularly
Jewish vision of America, Steven Alan Carr argues that this way of
looking at Jews in Hollywood emanates from a particularly American
vision of Jews. Like the Jewish Question of the 19th century--which
fretted over the full participation of Jews within public life--the
Hollywood Question of the 1920s, 30s and 40s fretted over Jewish
participation within the mass media. As a whole way of thinking and
talking about both Jews and motion pictures, Hollywood and Anti-Semitism
reveals a powerful set of assumptions concerning ethnicity, intent and
media influence. Steven Alan Carr is an Assistant Professor of
Communication at Indiana University-Purdue University, Fort Wayne. His
work appears in Cinema Journal and other publications. This is his first
book.