The Jewish Chronicle

Shapers of the shoreline

A ‘magnum opus’ impresses Daniel Snowman. David Herman on a ‘dark resurgence’ Genius and Anxiety: How Jews Changed the World

- By Norman Lebrecht

1847-1947

Oneworld, £20

Reviewed by Daniel Snowman

NORMAN LEBRECHT has a rare ability to evoke the past with the immediacy of a good journalist, broadcaste­r, novelist or blogger. But then, he has been all of these and more. Music lover extraordin­aire, Lebrecht is author of the highly successful blog Slipped Disc and many will know his often provocativ­e books about musicians and the music business. His novel The Song of Names has just been launched as a film.

Lebrecht is also profoundly conscious of his Jewish heritage, not least the dominance of Jewish-born musicians from Mendelssoh­n to Mahler, Schoenberg and beyond, as well as of countless scientists, authors and intellectu­als, artists, actors and film-makers who also happened to be Jewish. In his new book, a magnum opus of well over 400 pages, he brings his lifelong interests together.

Fearless as ever, Lebrecht launches boldly into his central theme: that Jews “changed the world” between the mid19th century and the mid-20th. Many of the people he features (Heine, Marx, Disraeli, Freud, Kafka, Trotsky, Einstein etc) will be familiar to most readers. Others are less well-known: Eliza Davis, who put Dickens right about Jews, Bizet’s wife Geneviève (née Halévy) who became the prototype of Carmen, the German sexologist Magnus Hirschfeld or Karl Landsteine­r, who was the first to identify blood groups.

What do all these have in common? Some were practising Jews but many were not. Nor was it a matter of shared DNA or a common belief in Israel as a homeland. Lebrecht emphasises their shared history: the triumphs, the tragedies, the travels — and being aware of “differentn­ess”. All this helped mould two prerequisi­tes for any kind of genuinely fresh thinking: an element of “anxiety” and a capacity for “genius”.

The story unfolds through a sequence of more-or-less decennial chapters, each concentrat­ing on particular events and personalit­ies prominent in and around a year. Much is narrated in the historic present: Marx “arrives (in London) in June 1849, intending to stay for a few weeks” and, a decade later, Dickens “puts his house on the market after separating from his wife”.

The text is packed with entertaini­ng (if sometimes questionab­le) bons mots as we read that Sarah Bernhardt is “the Einstein of fame”, Freud “crosses the bridge from failure to fame by means of deceit” and Lenny (Bernstein) is “God’s Jew, farts and all”.

As for the specifical­ly Jewish element Lebrecht seeks within the achievemen­ts he outlines, you may find him striving too hard at times. But his overall thesis is neatly summed up by his hero, Gustav Mahler, whom he quotes (twice) as saying: “A Jew is like a swimmer with a short arm. He has to swim twice as hard to reach the shore”.

Daniel Snowman is an author and biographer

 ?? PHOTO: ISTVAN BIELIK ?? Norman Lebrecht
PHOTO: ISTVAN BIELIK Norman Lebrecht

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