Picard propagated virulent racism and antisemitism in his works, such as
Synthèse de l’antisémitisme (1892, reprinted 1942) and
En Congolie (1896). He interpreted human society and its conflicts through the prism of race, claiming that Jews are "parasitic" and that Black people are "imitators like the apes". On account of his extremism he has been compared with the
proto-fascist Édouard Drumont in France.
Bernard-Henri Lévy considers him to have been the "first consistent disciple of
Arthur de Gobineau" and "the inventor of French-style
national socialism". File:EdmondPicardd'aprèsMascré.jpg|Bust of Edmond Picard by Louis Mascré 1910 Image:Edmond Picard.jpg|Portrait of Edmond Picard by
Jan Toorop ==References==