Abstract

ABSTRACT This article discusses Polish nationalists’ fear of “Judeo-Polonia,” a notion that emerged before the First World War, gained considerable traction during the war itself, and then began to morph into “Judeo-Communism” by war's end. Focusing on Warsaw, the article discusses the significance of population movements and demographic shifts, the appearance of new opportunities for political competition based both on identity politics and the prospect of an independent Poland, and the preordained failure of the new state to accommodate more than one national group after 1918.

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