Medieval era General Trends In the broader context of
medieval European literature, Jews were typically depicted through a
Christian lens, which emphasized religious differences and often cast Jews in adversarial roles. This portrayal was influenced by the Church's teachings and the
socio-political climate, which was generally hostile towards Jews. Literature of the time often mirrored these sentiments, using Jewish characters as foils for
Christian virtues or as examples of what were perceived as negative traits like greed or betrayal.
Notable Stereotype Works • The
Chanson de Roland: For instance, in
La Chanson de Roland, Jews are portrayed in a negative light, reflecting broader societal and theological attitudes prevalent during the medieval period. This epic poem, which is one of the earliest
chansons de geste, is known for its depiction of the
Battle of Roncevaux and the valorization of
Christian warriors, underscoring the perceived
heroism of Christians in contrast to non-Christians, including Jews. • Literature Surrounding the
Crusades: Many texts from the time of the Crusades depict Jews as enemies of Christianity. These works often justified violence and discrimination against Jews as part of a broader religious conflict. In medieval French literature, Jews are generally presented unfavorably. However, those Jews who convert are treated favorably. For example, a Jew who is among the infidels who convert is viewed positively in the 12th-century
Pèlerinage de Charlemagne a Jérusalem (
Pilgrimage of Charlemagne to Jerusalem). A rare exception to the unfavorable stereotyping of Jews is a work by
Peter Abelard framed as a dialogue between a Jewish and a Christian philosopher and presents Judaism in a favorable light.
18th century Although
Voltaire was celebrated for his commitment to tolerance, his writings often included vicious stereotypes of traditional targets of prejudice such as Jews and Catholics. Discussing Voltaire's literary treatment of Jews in works such as
Candide, Eric Palmer describes him as having been "uncharacteristically blind to some forms of inhumanity within his sphere." Robert Michael writes that, "Voltaire's work helped ensure that antisemitic stereotypes would persist among the educated members of French society." In his 1759 novel
Candide, Voltaire uses stereotypical characterization of Jews as greedy and dishonest. For example, Cunegonde is sold to a Jewish merchant. Despite
Voltaire’s significant contributions to the movement of
Enlightenment and his criticism of the
Church and monarchy, his writings on Jews sometimes echoed the antisemitic sentiments of his era. Voltaire attacked the biblical belief in the unity of mankind and targeted the
Old Testament and its followers in his critiques, using such attacks to challenge the
Church more broadly. His antisemitic remarks were not merely strategic but seemed to stem from a deeper disdain linked to his critique of religious dogmatism. Voltaire's complex relationship with Judaism and its followers was influential in shaping the mental climate of his time, paradoxically contributing to both the critique of traditional
antisemitism and the perpetuation of new forms of
racial antisemitism. His work is cited as having laid some of the groundwork for the
emancipation of Jews, yet also for the antisemitic attitudes that persisted among the educated elite in France. Henry H. Weinberg has described the stereotype of the Jewish banker in late nineteenth-century French literature as "shifty, cosmopolitan, cleverly manipulating ... single-minded [in his] quest for money." This stereotype is characterized by a portrayal of Jewish characters as manipulative, cunning, and overwhelmingly driven by a desire for monetary gain. Such depictions served to reinforce and justify
discriminatory attitudes toward Jews in society. In France, these portrayals depicted Jews as intertwined with the financial corruption and moral decay of
Parisian society, to the theatrical dramas of the time, which mirrored these literary depictions on stage. Similarly,
George Sand in her drama
Les Mississipiens presented a Jewish capitalist character in a negative light, comparing him to
Shakespeare's
Shylock, thereby perpetuating the stereotype of the cunning Jewish financier. These literary choices by
Balzac and
Sand illustrate how 19th-century French literature often embedded Jewish characters within broader narratives of modernization, class struggle, and societal anxiety, reflecting and reinforcing contemporary
prejudices.
20th century , 1895. The most important masterpiece of
French literature of the early 20th century,
Marcel Proust's seven-volume novel
In Search of Lost Time (published 1913−1927), features as its main hero a Jewish character:
Charles Swann, the art-loving son of a Jewish stockbroker. Proust paints a very nuanced picture of
Swann, with some irony, but benevolently. Proust himself was the son of a Jewish mother, but a baptized Catholic, whose own Jewish maternal grandfather, Nathée Weil, had also made his fortune as a stockbroker, from which the financially unsuccessful author was able to live comfortably throughout his life.
Swann rises in the 1850s to 90s into the exclusive circle of the
Jockey-Club de Paris and, thanks to his perfect manners and refined taste, becomes a close friend of high-ranking aristocrats. In the salon of the
Duchesse de Guermantes, the equally exclusive and snobbish "temple" of the aristocratic
"world of the Faubourg Saint-Germain", the Jewish parvenu succeeds against all odds in rising to the status of
arbiter elegantiarum. The real-life model for the novel's hero,
Charles Swann, was the art collector and dandy Charles Haas (1832–1902), whom
Swann resembles biographically, physically and in many aspects of his character, behavior, speech and social ambition. Haas, who advised rich nobles on their art purchases, was in fact a regular acquaintance of the
Prince of Wales and the only Jewish member of the Jockey Club, along with several members of the
Rothschild family. Haas said of himself: "I am the only Jew who has managed to be recognized by Parisian society without being infinitely rich." However, the novel's character
Swann conceals these social successes from his family's old circle of friends, including the narrator's parents. They would have hardly considered it possible − indeed, more likely inappropriate – since they had a "slightly Hindu idea" of society, with its impenetrable
caste system: "They saw how elegance characterized his features, but stopped at his
hooked nose like a natural boundary." From the early 1890s, following Haas's example, Proust himself succeeded in penetrating circles of the
French nobility and high aristocracy that were normally closed to a bourgeois, and thus he was able to depict this small, closed world in his work down to the finest nuances. What makes ''Swann's
Jewishness and his social successes so important in "Lost Time" is the background of the major political issue in France at the turn of the century, the Dreyfus Affair which was ultimately an attempt by anti-Semitic sections of the population to reverse the social acceptance of Jews in France. Swann
sides with the Jewish officer innocently accused of treason. Nevertheless, he himself is accused of treason by the Duke of Guermantes
: since Swann'' has been granted exceptional access to the Duke's class, he must, out of loyalty, share its anti-Dreyfus views. However, ''Swann's'' sympathies for Dreyfus play a less central role in Proust's story than his other blatant transgression against upper-class mores: he marries his mistress, a former prostitute who is not accepted in the "best" salons where
Swann himself would otherwise be welcome. Like his positioning in the Dreyfus Affair, his marriage has social consequences. While
Swann is presented as a nuanced singular figure, the first-person narrator
Marcel’s onetime schoolmate
Albert Bloch, a pro-Dreyfus activist, brilliant but uncouth, is a caricature of the pushy, ill-mannered Jew of anti-Semitic tropes. Going beyond the current occasion, the first-person narrator illustrates in Proust's grand, epoch-spanning panorama the changes that occur within the conservative, elite society over time: Like a
kaleidoscope that is occasionally rotated, it is constantly reconfigured into new patterns. While in his childhood in the 1870s, members of French Jewry – as well as advocates of the
French Third Republic – were fundamentally excluded from "elegant society," both groups gradually gained access until the Dreyfus Affair excluded Jews again. But after many Jews had proven themselves as front-line soldiers in the
First World War, they were readmitted, while an
Austrian prince, who had run the most elegant salon in Paris, although conservative and ultra-Catholic, suddenly found himself an "enemy." In the intermediate phases, however, as long as the kaleidoscope stands still, social immobility prevails, and this appears to those involved to be "as unchangeable and eternal as the current use of
oil lamps and
horsebuses". In her essay
Faubourg Saint-Germain (included in her insightful work
The Origins of Totalitarianism),
Hannah Arendt names some of Proust's characters from the volume
Sodom and Gomorrah as examples of the rootlessness of assimilated
Judaism in France, including
Swann. ==German literature==