Leilão 21 Eretz Israel, anti-Semitism, Holocaust, postcards and photographs, Autographs, Travel books, Judaica
Por DYNASTY
26.6.23
Avraham Ferrara 1, Jerusalem, Israel

The auction will take place on Monday, June 26, 2023, at 19:00 (Israel time) with an announcement.


Dear customers, an interesting and important catalog containing many rare and important historical items in the many fields in which we deal, we are happy for any question, inquiry, and delivery of all the necessary information beyond what is written in the catalog.

O leilão terminou

LOTE 44:

Collection of issues of the anti-Semitic weekly "Psst!". Paris, 1898-1899

Vendido por: $260
Preço inicial:
$ 150
Comissão da leiloeira: 23%
IVA: 17% Sobre a comissão apenas
Utilizadores de países estrangeiros podem estar isentos de pagamento de impostos, de acordo com as respectivas leis de imposto
26.6.23 em DYNASTY

Collection of issues of the anti-Semitic weekly "Psst!". Paris, 1898-1899


64 issues of the anti-Semitic weekly "Psst...!" (out of 85 issues total) - of the fiercest anti-Semitic publications during the Dreyfus affair. France - February 5, 1898 to January 1, 1899.


Included issues: 4-24, 26-28, 30-31, 33-44, 46-47, 49, 52-53, 56-59, 61-62, 64-65, 67-68, 70,72, 74, 77, 78, 79, 80-85


"Psst!" - an illustrated magazine founded by Jean-Louis Forain and Caran d'Ach (pen name of Emmanuel Poiré). A French weekly that regularly published anti-Semitic caricatures at the height of the Dreyfus affair against Dreyfus and his supporters (many cartoons mocking Emile Zola) and condemning the Jews. It was published in a fixed format of four pages full of virulent anti-Semitic illustrations that appeal to low emotions in order to create in the reader a sense of resistance and rejection of everything related to Dreyfus. The various issues feature hundreds of anti-Semitic illustrations by Forain and Caran d'Ach. These illustrations are considered the fiercest anti-Semitic publications published during the Dreyfus Affair. In response to Psst...!, Dreyfus supporters created their own competing weekly illustrated diary called "Le Sifflet". Both weeklies used grotesque visual imagery for their propaganda, creating a picturesque war discourse between the two camps.


64 issues. [4] Pages per issue. 40 cm. Overall Condition Good - Very Good.