The Blind Spots of Secularization: A qualitative approach to the study of antisemitism in Spain
According to several international surveys Spain is among the western countries with the most negative views of Jews. While quantitative data on the topic accumulates, there is a significant lack of interpretative approaches that might explain the particular Spanish case. This paper presents the background, methodology and major results of a discussion group-based study on antisemitism, which was conducted in Spain in the autumn of 2009. The study identifies and locates in different socio-economic and ideological milieus the range of stereotypical discourses on Jews, Judaism and the Arab–Israeli conflict in Spain. Analysis of the group meetings shows that, despite growing secularization in Spanish society, the central explanatory variable for persisting and resurging antisemitism in this country is still religion in a broad cultural sense.
Antisemitism Antisemitism: Discourse Focus Groups Interviews Qualitative Research Main Topic: Antisemitism
14(2)
203-221
Link to article (paywalled), The Blind Spots of Secularization: A qualitative approach to the study of antisemitism in Spain
The Blind Spots of Secularization: A qualitative approach to the study of antisemitism in Spain. 2012: 203-221. https://archive.jpr.org.uk/10.1080/14616696.2012.676451