List of fictional Jews explained

This is a list of fictional Jews, characters from any work of fiction whose Jewish identity has been noted as a key component of the story or who have been identified impacting or reflecting cultural views about Jewish people.

Year of first publication Character(s) Work Creator Media Country of publication Details
Traditional Ashkenazi Jewish folklore Traditional Folk tales Europe Within Jewish humor, the stock characters of the Wise Men of Chelm are foolish characters who are the subjects of jokes through their illogical reasoning.[1] Their foolish logic places them in opposition to the Talmudic scholars who are highly regarded in the culture.[2]
Traditional 13th Century Christian folklore Traditional Folk tales Europe Inspired by the biblical passage Matthew 16:27, 28 in which Jesus states "Verily I say unto you, There be some standing here, which shall not taste of death, till they see the Son of man coming in his kingdom", stories have circulated since the Middle Ages about a Jew who interacted with Jesus and was still alive, awaiting the second coming.[3] There are multiple variations of who the Wandering Jew is, such as a shopkeep who saw Jesus carrying his cross to be crucified and instead of showing compassion struck Jesus and told him to walk faster, and was thus cursed to wander the earth aging and finding no peace in death.
Traditional, perhaps as early as the 13th century The Jew's Daughter "Hugh of Lincoln" or "The Jew's Daughter" Traditional, included in Volume 3 of Francis James Child's English and Scottish Ballads from a version transcribed by Bishop Thomas Percy in 1765[4] Song England Child collected over 20 versions[5] of the ballad which recounts a tale of blood libel in which young boy, Sir Hugh, is lured by the Jew's daughter into her house (or castle depending upon the version) so that he can retrieve his ball that he had kicked into her window (or garden). Once in the house, the ballad says she ritually murders him to collect his blood for a ritual before throwing his body in a well where his mother finds it after his ghost calls out to her. While the boy in the ballad has been linked to Little Saint Hugh of Lincoln, both Child and Percy preface the ballad with a statement that as historical record, the tale is untrue.[6]
1353 Abraham,
Melchisedech
The Decameron (Decamerone) Giovanni BoccaccioNovella Italy Of the tales related by the characters in The Decameron, the second tells the story of Abraham, the wise Jew, who travels to The Vatican and notes the corruption there, yet upon returning home, converts to Christianity. In the third story Melchisedech is a Jewish money lender who is set up by the Sultan to identify which of the three religions of Judaism, Christianity, or Islam is the true religion. Melchisedech answers by telling a parable about an inheritance of true ring and two fake rings which leaves the answer in doubt, but satisfies the Sultan.[7]
1589 or 1590 Barabas,
Abigail
The Jew of Malta Christopher MarlowePlay England For Elizabethans, the character of the Jew, as presented in Barabas, is "an embodiment of all they loathe and fear, all that appears stubbornly, irreducibly different." The play became extremely popular,[8] and Barabas has become a culturally iconic anti-Semitic representation of "avarice, egotism, duplicity and murderous cunning."[9] Abigail, Barabas' beautiful daughter, converts to Christianity when she finds her father has duped her beloved into a fatal duel, and then becomes a nun to escape the sexual advances of a Friar. Barabas poisons her along with the rest of the nuns.[10]
1596 Shylock,
Jessica
The Merchant of Venice Play England Shylock is "the most famous Jewish character in English" and embodies a number of the negative stereotypes of Jews.[11] Shylock's daughter Jessica, inspired by Marlowe's Abigail in The Jew of Malta,[12] converts to Christianity, although the conversion is questioned by other characters and represents the cultural ambivalence that the belief espoused by a "beautiful Jewess" may be simply superficial.[13]
1609 Jerusalén conquistada
(Jerusalem Conquered)
Epic poem Spain In his faux historical narrative poem, Lope de Vega presents the character of Rahel la Fermosa (Rachel the beautiful) who has an affair with Alfonso VIII of Castile, before she is murdered by his courtiers as a threat to the emerging kingdom. The historicity of "The Jewess of Toledo", as Rahel is known, has been debated[14] while the character has been recreated in numerous works, including the play The Jewess of Toledo (1851) by Franz Grillparzer, the silent film The Jewess of Toledo (1919) directed by Otto Kreisler, and the novel Die Jüdin von Toledo (1955) novel by Lion Feuchtwanger.
c. 1668 Mergata The Jewish Bride
or On Dimo, the Albanian Baker who Loved a Jewish Girl
Narrative poem Ottoman Empire The poem tells the story of how Dimo, an Albanian Christian boy kidnaps the Jewish Mergata from the city of Constantinople to his home town where he converts her and they are married by the Prince.[15] Versions of the poem have been found in Armenian, Turkish and Greek. Some scholars believe that Eremya's depiction of the Jewish religion as being inferior to Christianity was a stand-in for a critique of the dominant Islamic religion.[16]
1779 Nathan the Wise Nathan the Wise (Nathan der Weise) Play Germany Nathan "is presented as an idealized mouthpiece for the Enlightenment principles of toleration and human fellowship."[17]
1794 Sheva The Jew Play England In apology for his previous negative portrayals of Jews, Cumberland presents Sheva as a "didactic good Jew", who, while outwardly appearing as a miser, is a secret philanthropist.[18] Judith Page identifies Sheva as part of the stereotypical Jewish characters that appeared on the British stage at the time who were created by people "who simply do not know much about the subject" of Jews or Judaism.[19]
1797Adonah Ben Benjamin The Algerine Captive Novel United States Adonah Ben Benjamin is a wealthy Jewish banker in Algiers, who, for a price, promises to help the narrator, who has been captured into slavery in Algiers, return to freedom in the United States, but dies before being able to complete the process. Ben Benjamin is the first contemporaneous Jew to be depicted in an American novel.[20]
1820 Isaac of York,
Rebecca
Ivanhoe Novel England Isaac is a money lender, and while presented with many negative characteristics stereotypical of Jewish villains, has been presented by Scott with "historical basis" for his greed.[21] His daughter, Rebecca is at the center of a love triangle with the titular Ivanhoe, and Rowena, a gentile woman. Rebecca maintains both her religious faith and her virtue, and Ivanhoe marries Rowena.[22]
1833 Rachel Rachel; or, The Inheritance Novel France Foa presents her protagonist, Rachel, in a semi-autobiographical representation of Foa's life which includes a failed marriage and becoming a writer. Foa is one of the first Jewish women novelists in the world, and her sister was married to Fromental Halévy who wrote La Juive.[23] Foa's later works include a number of historical romances in which the characters convert from Judaism, which Foa also did.
1835 Eléazar;
Rachel, his foster daughter
La Juive Opera France In "the only great opera written by a Jew about a Jew",[24] Eléazar is the Jewish father-figure of Rachel, the "Jewess" of the title, whom he had saved from the ruins of an estate when she was a baby and raised as his daughter. The opera became popular in France at a time when the theme of "The Jewess" and Jewish singers were popular.[25] [26]
1838Oliver Twist Novel England Dickens' anti-Semitic introduction the character of Fagin notes his ugliness, wild red hair, and holding a toasting fork over a fire, all characteristics of the Christian Devil.[27] Later editions of the novel have frequently been altered to use Fagin's name in place of Dickens' frequently-used descriptor "the Jew".
1843Alick Judah's Lion Novel EnglandAlick is a Jew who converts to Christianity, and as the novel ends, begins making plans for making a converted Jewish colony in Palestine a part of the British Empire.[28]
1846 Inez Villena,
Annie Montague
The Jewish FaithInstructional narrativeEngland The anti-conversion work takes the form of a series of letters between the young Jewish woman Annie who is struggling with her faith, and the older Jewish woman, Inez, who instructs her in the benefits of the faith and provides guidance.[29]
1848 Deborah Deborah Play Austria In his stage play about a group of Jewish people seeking to establish a community in eastern Europe, Mosenthal, who was Jewish himself, presents the Jewish Deborah as a seductress in contrast to the "saint-like" Christian Hannah.[30]
1863 Leah Leah, the Forsaken Play England Part of a series of plays on the English stage featuring Jewish women characters that were inspired by Mosenthal's Deborah, Leah, the Forsaken was a star vehicle for the Jewish actress Sarah Bernhardt.[31] The play is also believed to have influenced the production of George Eliot's Daniel Deronda.
1865 Soloman Riah Our Mutual Friend Novel England Created by Dickens partly in response to the accusations of anti-Semitism he received for his character Fagin in Oliver Twist, Mr Riah is a Jewish moneylender who is shown as virtuous and admirable.[32] [33]
1876 Daniel Deronda Daniel Deronda Novel England Within the novel, Daniel discovers (on her deathbed) that his long-lost mother was Jewish and begins constructing his identity as a Jew.[34]
1876 Clarel,
Rolf,
Vine,
Abdon,
Lyonese and others
Clarel Poem United States The narrative poem, about Clarel's visit to Jerusalem as he questions his religious faith, features a number of Jewish characters, some representing Melville's literary colleagues, others representing Jews from a variety of backgrounds, such as Abdon from India.[35]
1880Judah Ben-HurLew WallaceNovel, play, films, TV seriesUnited StatesJudah Ben-Hur is a first-century Jewish nobleman enslaved by the Romans. At the end of the novel he becomes a Christian.
1894 Bonshte "Bonshte the Silent"Short story PolandThe story of meek Bonshte "who never learned his worth" became an admonition to Jewish workers and one of many inspirations by Peretz for their social activism in Poland.[36]
1894 (original story),
1957 (Perl's play),
1964 (Bock / Harnick/ Stein musical),
1971 (film)
"Tevye Strikes It Rich" and other stories,
Tevye and His Daughters,
Fiddler on the Roof,
Fiddler on the Roof (film)
Sholem Aleichem (short story),
Arnold Perl (play),
Jerry Bock/ Sheldon Harnick / Joseph Stein (musical),
Norman Jewison (film director)
Short stories,
play,
musical,
film
Russia,
United States
Tevye was originally created by Sholem Aleichem and featured in a series of short stories in Yiddish. The character and his stories were recreated by numerous writers, including the stage play by Perl, which was turned into a musical by Bock, Harnick and Stien which was itself later adapted into a film directed by Jewison.[37]
1894Svengali Trilby Novel England Svengali is a Jewish musician depicted distastefully as a hypnotist and exploiter of the young and impressionable Trilby.[38]
1909 The Wondrous Deeds of the Maharal of Prague with the Golem Short stories Poland Rosenberg published a work in which he presented the folklore that had grown up around Judah Loew ben Bezalel (also known as Maharal) in which he created a golem that protected the Jewish residents of the ghetto in Prague from violence and anti-Semitic attacks.[39]
1909 Sadie Cohen "Sadie Salome (Go Home)" Song United States Within the lyrics of the song, Sadie Cohen has become an exotic dancer performing as Salome in Dance of the Seven Veils, and she is admonished by her boyfriend in a Yiddish accent "That I am your lovin' Mose/Oy Oy Oy Oy / Where is your clothes?".[40] Sadie became one of the on-stage persona used by the comedian Fanny Brice who had to learn the Yiddish accent for the part.[41]
1912 (vaudeville),
1914 (phonograph recording),
1923 (film)
Samuel Cohen "Cohen on the Telephone"
Cohen on the Telephone
Comic skit,
comedy recording,
film
England (skit),
United States (recording, film)
The skit presented one side of a telephone conversation in which Cohen, a recent immigrant, had difficulty being understood because of his strong Yiddish accent and not understanding the customs of the new country.[42] On the vaudeville stage, the skits were performed by a number of comedians, and variations of the skit were recorded on phonograph records beginning with Hayman in 1914[43] and continuing through a recording by Monroe Silver in 1942. and an early film version short "talkie" in 1923.[44]
1913 Albert Bloch
Charles Swann
In Search of Lost Time
(originally published in English as Remembrance of Things Past)
(À la recherche du temps perdu)
Novel France Within the seven volumes of the novel, Bloch is initially presented as a "vulgar" Jew who is attempting to gain admittance to the upper circles of French society, while Swann is a Jewish man who has been assimilated to the point that he is a member of clubs that don't normally admit Jews. By the end of the novel, Bloch has assumed a new name and appearance, while Swann has claimed his cultural Jewish heritage as a result of the impact of the Dreyfus affair.[45] [46]
1918 Ulysses Novel Ireland Leopold Bloom is presented as an everyman.[47] While Bloom's father had converted from Judaism, Jewish cultural markers play an important touchstones in his inner life as presented in the novel.[48]
1925 Meyer Wolfshiem The Great Gatsby Novel United States Meyer Wolfshiem is portrayed as the friend and mentor of the titular character Jay Gatsby. He is described as a gambler responsible for fixing the World series[49] who had made his money by bootlegging alcohol during Prohibition. Wolfsheim, described with unflattering stereotypical physical characteristics as well, is portrayed as an "alien" couter-pole to Anglo Tom Buchanan in Fitzgerald's presentation of America.[50] [51]
1926 (book, play and film) Benya Krik Odessa Tales (Одесские рассказы) (Collected short stories)
Sunset (play)
Benya Krik (film)
Novel,
play,
film
Russia With the character of Benya Krik, Babel brought the "Jewish gangster" motif from folk tales to "high" literature, a tradition followed by a number of other artists, who also play on the mixture of "Russian, Yiddish, Odessa jargon and thieves' argot" that Krik speaks through their use of language to signal the Jewish gangster.[52]
1926 Claude Levy L'enfant prophète Novel France Claude Levy is a young Jewish boy growing up in Paris who seeks a spiritual life and is drawn towards Catholicism before embracing his Jewish roots at the advice of Jesus.[53]
1926 Robert Cohn The Sun Also Rises Novel United StatesCohn, a former collegiate boxer who attended Princeton when few Jews were admitted, does not fit in with his fellow expatriates in Paris who make antisemitic insults, falls in love with the same woman the narrator loves, and ends up getting into fights when he does not realize that she does not want to pursue a relationship with him.[54] [55]
1927 Jakie Rabinowitz, aka Jack Robin The Jazz Singer Alan Crosland (director)
Alfred A. Cohn (writer)
Film United States In the story, Jakie runs away from home because his father, a cantor, wants Jakie to use his voice in service of God, but Jakie wants to become a popular singer.[56] The Jazz Singer remains "one of the most intensely Jewish films ever released for a general audience.[57]
1929 (radio)
1949 (Television)
Molly Goldberg The Goldbergs Radio
Television
United StatesMolly's portrayal was widely seen as an authentic representation of Jewish life in America and served as a "catalyst in the development of interfaith and interracial understanding"[58]
1935 K'tonton The Adventures of K'tonton Children's booksUnited States The stories of K'tonton, a boy the size of a thumb, which follow his adventures during Jewish holidays are among the first American Jewish children's stories to incorporate a sense of whimsy rather than simply instructing in moral values.[59]
1936 Deborah BerDer sheydim tantz
(Eng: The Devil's Dance),
published in English as
Deborah
Novel Poland Deborah, a semi-autobiographical stand-in for Kreitman, chronicles the struggles of a woman with intellectual curiosity who because she is a woman, does not have access to study in the yeshiva.[60] Kreitman's brother, I. B. Singer, later used a similar set up for his story Yentl the Yeshiva Boy.[61]
1937 Short stories in The New Yorker which were gathered into the novel The Education of Hyman Kaplan and other novels Leo RostenShort stories, novel United States Hyman Kaplan is a Jewish immigrant taking language classes at a night school. Rosten presents him in the tradition of language-based humor highlighting Kaplan's "tongue-in-cheek mistakes which, most of the time, spring from a calculated meeting of Yiddish with English".[62]
1945 Debbie Brown The Wasteland Novel United States Debbie Brown is the first lesbian main character in a novel by an American woman. In the novel, Debbie helps her brother deal with his feelings about being Jewish by recommending that he sees the psychiatrist that helped her deal with the fact that she is a lesbian.[63]
1946 (short story),
1952 (novel)
Narrator,
Mother,
Father
"To a Country Town",
Alien Son
Short stories,
later collected into a novel
Australia In the semi-autobiographical stories, the narrator tells of his experiences as a young Jewish immigrant and his family after they have arrived in Australia shortly after the turn of the twentieth century. Events in the stories include the narrator being humiliated on behalf of his mother for whom he has to translate because she refuses to learn English.[64] [65]
1947 (novel and film) Elaine Wales
(aka Estelle Wilovsky)
Gentleman's Agreement (novel)
Gentleman's Agreement (film)
Laura Z. Hobson,
Moss Hart (screenplay)
Novel,
film
United States In both the novel and the film, the Jewish woman Estelle Wilovsky changes her name to Elaine Wales so that she can get a job as a secretary and ends up working for "Phil Greenberg", the fake Jewish persona that Gentile reporter Philip Green has taken on to experience antisemitism first hand for a column he will be writing. When she discovers that Greenberg is in fact a Christian, she is confronted with her own antisemitism[66] and has been identified as an example of the self-hating Jew.[67]
1948 Ezra ben Israel Peony Novel United States Ezra ben Israel and his family are part of the longstanding Jewish community living in the 1850s in the city of K'aifeng, China before its later dispersal and assimilation.[68]
1951 Uncle Melech Davidson The Second Scroll A. M. KleinNovel Canada An unnamed narrator, a Montreal journalist and editor, searches for his long-lost uncle, Melech Davidson, a messianic figure who has survived the Holocaust and struck out for Israel.[69]
1955 (novel)
1958 (film)
Marjorie Morningstar Marjorie Morningstar (novel)
Marjorie Morningstar (film)
Herman Wouk (novel)
Irving Rapper (director)
Novel,
film
United States In the character of Marjorie Morningstar who is the "ultimate bourgeois consumer" who wants a "big diamond engagement ring" and other possessions marking status, Wouk helped establish the stereotype of the Jewish American Princess.
1960Isaac Edward Leibowitz
The Pilgrim (Benjamin Eleazar bar Yehoshua)
A Canticle for Leibowitz Walter M. Miller, Jr.Novel United States While he does not appear as a character in the story, the titular Leibowitz, a Jewish engineer, converted after a nuclear holocaust which devastated society and led to popular uprisings against technology which included the destruction of books. Within an isolated monastery, Leibowitz led the monks in their efforts to collect and preserve knowledge. The story of the novel initially follows Brother Francis Gerard who begins his journeys after an encounter with a nameless hermit, who is later identified as a Jew, and even later named as Benjamin Eleazar bar Yehoshua.[70]
1961Buddy Sorrell The Dick Van Dyke Show TV seriesUnited States When Reiner pitched the show, he was told to make it "accessible to the public" and so the ethnic backgrounds of the characters were initially glossed over with Sorrell's Jewish background not being discussed until last seasons of the show.[71]
19612000 Years with Carl Reiner and Mel Brooks and others Mel Brooks, Carl ReinerStand-up, audio recordingsUnited States In the comedy skits, Mel Brooks portrays a 2000 year old Jewish man who responds to questions posed by an interviewer played by Reiner. The works play on the explicit "otherness" created by Brooks' presentation in the Yiddish accent of "the non-assimilated, foreign-born outsider.[72]
1961 Danidin The adventures of Dani, who can see but not be seen, and many other books Children's books Israel Danidin, the protagonist of a series of children's books, has become invisible and uses his power to fight the enemies of Israel. Dani presents admirable traits such as learning to overcome fear,[73] they also make comparisons equating Muslims to Nazi's.[74]
1962 (short story)
1975 (play)
1983 (film)
Yentl "Yentl the Yeshiva Boy"
Yentl (play)
Yentl (film)
Isaac Bashevis Singer (short story)
Singer and Leah Napolin (play)
Barbra Streisand (film)
Short story,
play,
film
United States Yentl is a Jewish girl in eastern Europe who disguises herself as a boy so that she can study the Talmud.[75] While in Singer's presentation, Yentl's scholarly desires and physical description are seen as being something of a "freak of nature", in the film adaptation, Streisand presents Yentl's as natural and the restrictions placed by society as unnatural.[76]
1963 Lawrence Breavman The Favorite Game Novel Canada Breavman, based on Cohen, is a young aspiring Jewish artist from a wealthy family in Montreal who "considers himself a crossbreed of the French, the Jewish and the English" that make up the city,[77] and struggles to come to terms with the Holocaust.[78]
1963 Magneto (Max Eisenhardt) Uncanny X-Men #1 Comic Book United States Magneto is a supervillain, sometimes antihero, sometimes hero. He was the main antagonist for the X-Men for many years. He was born with the ability to control magnetism, thus he was also a mutant as well. He is an Auschwitz survivor and fears that humanity will kill mutants for being different the same way the Nazis killed the Jews. His character's early history has been compared with the lives of civil rights leader Malcolm X[79] [80] and Jewish Defense League founder Meir Kahane.[81] [82] In 2011, IGN ranked Magneto as the greatest comic book villain of all time, outranking 99 other villains for the top spot.[83]
1964 Rabbi Small Friday the Rabbi Slept Late and other novels Novel United States Small was one of the first Jewish characters in American detective fiction. Kemelman presented him "almost completely in terms of his Jewish belief, and, as such, [he] is a genuinely new figure in detective fiction."[84]
1966 Yakov Bok The Fixer Novel United States Yakov Bok, modeled after Menahem Mendel Beilis is a Russian Jew who leaves the ghetto in search of work. When a young Christian boy is murdered, Bok is falsely arrested and charged with the crime.[85]
1967 Sammy Burrman The Meeting Point NovelCanada During a therapy session as an adult, the Jewish Burrman recounts how as a child he let his black friend Jeffrey take the blame for an apple that Burrman had stolen. The incident caused the formerly multiracial youth gang to split up by ethnicity and continues to cause Burrman guilt.[86]
1967 (novel)
1992 (TV film)
Genghis Cohn,
Otto Schatz
La Danse de Genghis Cohn (novel)
Genghis Cohn (TV film)
Romain Gary,
Elijah Moshinsky (director)
Stanley Price (screenplay)
Novel,
TV film
France (novel),
England (TV film)
In the story, Genghis Cohn is the ghost of a Jewish comedian who was killed in the Holocaust and comes back to haunt the former camp leader of Dachau, and eventually gets him to convert.[87]
1969Alexander Portnoy
Sophie Portnoy
Portnoy's Complaint Philip RothNovel United StatesRoth's presentation of Portnoy as a Jew enthralled with sexual passions in opposition to images of moral and rational led to widespread discussions.[88] Warren Rosenberg describes Portnoy as using his penis to break the barriers of being a "nice Jewish boy" and becoming an authentic "American male"[89] Portnoy's mother Sophie is presented as a smothering Jewish mother, which Portnoy has feared will make him gay.[90]
1969Harold Hooper (Mr. Hooper) Sesame Street Joan Ganz Cooney (series creator)
Will Lee (actor)
TV series United States The show occasionally alluded to Mr. Hooper being Jewish. One of the most specific occurrences is in the special Christmas Eve on Sesame Street when Bob wishes him a happy Hanukkah.[91] His performer Will Lee was also Jewish.
1969 (novel)
1975 (East German-Czechoslovakian film)
1999 (US film)
Jacob Heym Jacob the Liar (Jakob der Lügner) (novel)
Jacob the Liar (1975 film)
Jakob the Liar (1999 film)
Jurek Becker (novel)
Frank Beyer (dir 1975 film)
Peter Kassovitz (dir 1999 film)
Novel,
film
East Germany,
East Germany-Czechoslovakia,
United States
Jacob is the protagonist of the first novel in East Germany to deal with the Jewish experience of the Holocaust.[92] The 1975 film portrays Jacob and the other characters in the ghetto as "fully Jewish and fully human" and the Nazi guards as "the other".
1972 Teresa Morada interior Novel Mexico The story presents a fictionalized account of the 16th century Spanish mystic Santa Teresa de Jesus, a Spanish nun. In the novel, when she discovers that her ancestors were marrano, converted Jews, she escapes from Spain to Mexico to explore her Jewish roots.[93]
1974 My Life As a Man and other novels Novels United States Zuckerman, a character who appears in many of Roth's novels, is a Jewish writer. In The Ghost Writer, Zuckerman is surprised at the reception his book about Jewish characters receives in the Jewish community.[94]
1974 Rhoda Morgenstern,
Brenda Morgenstern,
Ida Morganstern
Rhoda TV series United StatesRhoda was the first Jewish female lead character of an American TV show since Molly Goldberg in 1955.[95] Rhoda's sister, Brenda, was presented as a "very ethnic" counterpart to Rhoda, while their mother, Ida, was a stereotypical Jewish mother, pushing her daughters to get married and using guilt as a weapon.[96]
1975 Moon Knight (Marc Spector) Werewolf by Night #32 Comic Book United States Moon Knight is a superhero with dissociative identity disorder given power by the moon god Khonshu. The son of a rabbi, he was one of the first overtly Jewish comic book superheroes.[97]
1976 FeigueleFeiguele and Other Women
(Feiguele y otras mujeres)
Novel ArgentinaAs a teenager, Feiguele, the daughter of Jewish immigrants to Argentina, feels like an outsider because of her "unusual" name, her Jewish heritage, and the fact that her father only speaks Yiddish, not the local Spanish.[98]
1977 Annie Hall FilmUnited StatesIn the film, Alvy Singer (Woody Allen), a neurotic, Jewish, twice-divorced comedian, directly addresses the audience and discusses his failed relationship with the Gentile, Annie Hall (Diane Keaton, who was dating Allen at the time) shares many characteristics with Allen. The film "and its interweaving of performer and persona, actual experience and fictional episode, personal pain and comic detachment, self-consciousness and self-expression is as complete a depiction of neurotic but cathartic Jewish inwardness as has ever been seen on a movie screen."[99]
1977 Edmund Ziller The Adventures of Edmund Ziller in the lands of the New World
(Aventuras de Edmund Ziller en tieras del Nuevo Mundo)
Novel Argentina The novel, in a variety of formats, follows the character Edmund Ziller through various incarnations as he encounters important events in the discovery and history of the new world and highlights the impact that Jews have had on those events.[100]
1979 Brian Cohen Monty Python's Life of Brian Film England Brian Cohen's life parallel's the life of Jesus, and while most film presentations of Jesus gloss over his Jewish identity, Brian proudly proclaims his Jewish background.[101]
1980Kitty Pryde[102] ComicsUnited StatesKitty Pryde was one of the first openly Jewish superheroes in a major comic label.[103] In one storyline, she and Magneto bond over the loss of their relatives in The Shoah and speak at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.
1982 Tzili Kraus Tzili Novella Israel Appelfeld created the Jewish girl Tzili as a character through which he could tell a story based on autobiographical elements of his own life and his escape from the Holocaust to Israel[104] through what Joyce Carol Oates describes as an "eliptical, oblique, indirect art".[105]
1982 Yonatan LifshitzA Perfect Peace (מנוחה נכונה) Amos OzNovelIsrael Yonatan, born and raised in a kibbutz, flees the stifling "utopian romanticism" of the Zionists of his parents' generation in a journey of self-discovery in the desert in the days leading up to the Six-Day War.[106]
1982 (play)
1988 (film)
Arnold Beckoff Play,
film
United States Within the story, Arnold's secular approach to life, along with his homosexuality, create conflict between him and his mother which drives the third act of the story, "Widows and Children First".[107]
1982 Isak Jacobi Fanny and Alexander (Fanny och Alexander) Film Sweden Isak Jacobi rescues Fanny and Alexander from the "sterile" home of their strict Protestant step-father and brings them to his basement, a "world of fantasy, art and imagination."[108] Earlier, as a point of "titillation" the film had shown that Alexander's grandmother Helena had had an affair with Isak, the "lowly Jew".[109]
1984 (novel) Heidi AbromowitzThe Life and Hard Times of Heidi Abramowitz (novel)
Joan Rivers and Friends Salute Heidi Abramowitz (TV special)
Comedy sketches,
novel,
TV special
United States Heidi Abromowitz was a character created by Rivers for her stand up routines, who, in contrast to being a "nice Jewish girl," was a "liberated whore with a heart of gold".[110]
1985 (film) Greg Gardner A Chorus Line Arnold Schulman (film screenplay) Film United States Greg Gardner quips about being a "double minority" because he is Jewish and gay.[111]
1986 (novel)
1990 (miniseries)
2017 (film)
Stanley Uris It (novel) Novel United States 12-year-old Stanley "Stan" Uris was a highly skeptical Jewish boy. His parents were also Jewish but they didn't follow the practice very strictly, resulting in Stan not knowing what it meant to be kosher. Anti-semite bully Henry Bowers and his gang repeatedly persecuted Stan, once by white-washing his face in snow until it bled. At age 39, Stan's skepticism ultimately led to him committing suicide in a bathtub by slitting his wrists to get out of fighting the ancient evil clown, It (whom he was the most afraid of out of his friends as a child), once again.
1987 Michael Steadman thirtysomethingTV seriesUnited StatesThe show featured several plotlines where Michael sought to "maintain his connections to Judaism."[112]
1987 Hillela Capran A Sport of Nature Novel South Africa The story follows Hillela, a Jewish woman born in South Africa, who was known as Kim while in school. Hillela reclaims her Jewish lineage by dropping the name Kim. She later has a relationship and a daughter with a black African revolutionary. After he dies, Hillela becomes one of the wives of another black man who becomes President of a fictional African country and is given the name African name Chiemeka. In the character's changing of names with the changing of identities, Louise Yelin says the novel explores "whether or how Jewish, English-speaking white writers in South Africa can become African writers".[113]
1989 Krusty the Clown, aka Herschel Krustovsky The Simpsons Animated television series United States In the episode Like Father, Like Clown, Krusty is revealed to have been passing as a gentile and "self-censor[ing]" his Jewish identity in a manner similar to the Hollywood movie moguls of the early 20th Century.[114]
1989Jerry Seinfeld,
Tim Whatley,
Rabbi Krischbaum,
Kessler
SeinfeldTV seriesUnited States The character of Jerry Seinfeld is "a New York Jew, a sarcastic, wisecracking cynic with an overbite, living on the margin of the middle state."[115] In one episode, Jerry is upset that his dentist, Tim Whatley, has converted to Judaism so that he can tell Jewish jokes.[116] Rabbi Kirschbaum, who publicly exposed on his cable TV show personal secrets that Elaine Benes had told to him, was a "unique" negative portrayal of a Rabbi on American TV.[117] In the pilot, Jerry's neighbor was initially the Jewish Kessler, but was changed to non-Jewish Cosmo Kramer in part because Brandon Tartikoff had thought the show was "too New York," "too Jewish" for the mainstream American public.
1990 Hadara Flying Lessons
(Maurice Cheviv'el Melamed La'oof)
Young adult novel IsraelA young girl growing up in a small Israeli village whose mother has died, hears stories from a neighbor about flying through the air that she initially believes are about a secret life as a circus performer but later understands that it was how he survived a concentration camp.[118]
1991 Saturday Night Live Comedy sketches United States Myers cross dressed to portray Richman, the host of a talk show "Coffee Talk" in recurring skits on SNL, who embodied extreme caricatures of Jewish women, including her use of Jewish phrases, such as verklempt and over-the-top passion for the real life performer Barbra Streisand.[119]
1992 Sara Goode,
Gorgeous Teitelbaum,
Pfeni Rosensweig,
Mervyn Kant
The Sisters Rosensweig Play United States The play deals with the issues of cultural assimilation, with conflicts arising between Sara's aspirations for assimilation and Gorgeous and Mervyn embracing their Jewish identity.[120]
1992 Dolly Dolly City Orly Castel-BloomNovel Israel In the violent fantasy Dolly City, the protagonist, Dolly, carves the map of the state of Israel on the back of her baby son so that he will know the borders of the land he will be protecting when he grows up to join the Israeli army.[121]
1993The Nanny TV series United States In the original American version, Fran and her mother are frequently depicted with characteristics of the Jewish American Princess and Jewish mother stereotypes, in the Italian dubbed version, Fran is depicted as Italian American and her mother as a stereotypical "Italian mother" which modifies much of the basis of the core humor of the show.[122]
1994 FriendsTV seriesUnited States Within the story, Monica and Ross Geller's father is Jewish. However, other than rare references to Hanukkah, the show does not overtly explore or on their Jewish heritage, so Vincent Brook labels them as "perceptually Jewish".[123] While not intended by their creator as being Jewish,
Monica and Ross' mother and Chandler's girlfriend Janice have been perceived as a stereotypical smothering Jewish mother and spoiled Jewish American Princess.
1994 Nazira Mualdeb and her family The Perfumes of Carthage
(Perfumes de Cartago)
Novella Uruguay The novella follows the lives of the women of the Mualdeb family from the time they emigrate from Syria to Uruguay in the early 20th century. As the family slowly assimilates, they maintain symbols and traditions of their sephardic heritage, such as the use of a matchmaker to arrange marriages.[124]
1994Arnold PerlsteinThe Magic School BusJoanna ColeBruce DegenChildren's books, animated TV seriesUnited StatesThe phobic child in the series, Arnold's Jewish background is mentioned in the episode "Family Holiday Special" where he cannot see The Nutcracker due to having to leave to see his sick grandmother for Hanukkah.
1995 Moraes Zogoiby The Moor's Last Sigh Novel England Moraes Zagoiby is of Catholic, Jewish and Muslim heritage living in India. Within the novel, Zogoiby's Jewish community at Cochin disperses. Sander Gilman describes the novel as one in the "model of storytelling in which the Jews exist in the past but vanish as the storyteller moves toward the present."[125]
1995Zacarias Levy Alba y el recaudador de aguas
and other stories
Young adult novels Spain In Múgica's young adult novels, Zacarias and two companions solve mysteries. The books' presentation of the Jewish Levy family "as naturally as any other characters" was described as a "novelty" in Spanish literature of the time. In the second book, the plotline involves the Levy family being attacked by Aryans.[126]
1996Jake and Rachel BerensonAnimorphsKatherine Applegate, Michael Grant (as K.A. Applegate)Young adult novelsUnited StatesJake and Rachel are paternal first cousins, and at one point Rachel mentions that her father is Jewish, logically making her and Jake Jewish as well. In an alternate universe, Jake mentions being Jewish in his narration.[127]
1997 Bobe (Grandmother) La bobe Novel Mexico The novel illustrates the relationships between the young narrator, her mother, and her bobe. Bobe is very strong in her Jewish faith, while the mother has rejected Judaism, and the narrator attempts to join the two worlds together.[128] [129]
1997Kyle Broflovski,
his family,
and cousin Kyle[130]
South Park TV seriesUnited StatesCartman's vitriolic anti-Semitic comments and Kyle's responses are one of the show's hallmarks.[131] Kyle's mother, Sheila, protests the schools celebration of Christmas because "Our family doesn't celebrate Christmas" which stops the holiday in South Park.[132] Kyle's cousin from Connecticut, also named Kyle, appears in the 5th season's episode The Entity as a neurotic stereotypical Jew in the mold of Woody Allen, but is also used to critique "whiteness".
1997 Ruth Puttermesser The Puttermesser Papers Novel United States Puttermesser is a recurring character in the works of Ozick and the subject of all of the stories collected in The Puttermesser Papers . She is a Jewish-American lawyer, living in New York. In one of the stories, Ozick "Americanizes" Jewish folklore when Puttermesser confronts the evil mayor of New York, Malachy Mavett, by creating a female golem out of the dirt of her flowerpots, and with the help of the golem, turns New York into a paradise and becomes mayor.[133]
1997 Unnamed narrator The Walled CityNovel India The narrator, an unnamed Jewish girl from the long established Bene Israel community in India, recounts her life growing up in Delhi. The story recounts her attraction to the "noisy" Hindu religious ceremonies and how she falls in love with a boy from the higher class Baghdadi Jewish community.[134] The book has been called "India's first Jewish novel.[135]
1997 Buffy the Vampire Slayer TV show United States Willow Rosenberg stood out as a positive portrayal of a Jewish woman and at the height of her popularity, she fell in love with another woman, a witch named Tara Maclay. They became one of the first lesbian couples on U.S. television and one of the most positive relationships of the series.
1998 Will and Grace TV series United States When the character Grace Adler married Leo Markus, it was the first time a wedding between two Jews was shown as part of an American television series.[136]
1999 Family Guy TV series United States The series has repeatedly been criticized for perceived anti-Semitic humor such as main character Peter Griffin "hanging a 'Scare Jew' dressed like Hitler in his front yard to keep a Jewish neighbor away"[137] and shooting at Mort Goldman, the same neighbor, in parody of a scene from Schindler's List.[138] Goldman has been described by the Parents Television Council as "a stereotyped Jewish man."[139]
1999Joshua Lyman, Toby ZieglerThe West WingAaron SorkinTV seriesUnited StatesJoshua Lyman's grandfather was held in the Nazi Concentration camp Birkenau during World War II. He is non-practicing, although his faith is sometimes brought up by other characters on the show from time to time. Toby Ziegler is a practicing Jew, whose father worked for the Jewish-Italian arm of La Casa Nostra known as Murder, Incorporated. In "Take this Sabbath Day" (1:14), Toby's rabbi gives a sermon on the amorality of capital punishment to influence Toby to take action on an inmate expected to be executed in a few days, and privately urges him to do the same.
2000Joseph Kavalier, Sam Clay (Klayman), Rosa Saks, various charactersThe Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & ClayMichael ChabonNovelUnited StatesJoe is an artist and escapist from Prague who narrowly escapes the Nazi takeover of Czechoslovakia, and comes to live with his cousin Sam Klayman in New York City. There, they create some of the first comic books.
2000 Various characters Curb Your Enthusiasm Larry David TV series United States Characters: Larry David, Jeff Greene, Susie Greene, Marty Funkhouser, Nat David, Jerry Seinfeld, Andy Ackerman, Jason Alexander and other common Jewish guest characters. Curb Your Enthusiasm stars Larry David after "Seinfeld" has ended. The show depicts himself going about his everyday life in Santa Monica, California. The show offers the life and times of Larry and the predicaments he gets himself in with his friends and complete strangers. If there isn't a show that screams Judaism, it's got to be this one. From the out-spoken stereotypical personality Brooklyn Jew, Larry throughout the show comes into conflicts whether it be with money, a Passover Seder, or Bat Mitzvah speech the show simply has got it all.
2000 Doctors Television England Valerie takes a DNA test and discovers that she is 16% Jewish. She decides to explore her Jewish heritage and begins a relationship with Rabbi David Klarfeld (Simon Schatzberger).[140]
2002 Alex-Li Tandem The Autograph Man Zadie SmithNovel England Alix-Li is a Chinese Jewish Londoner who grew up on pop culture and is writing a book in which he classifies things a "Jewish" or "goyish".[141]
2002 Kim Possible Bob Schooley, Mark McCorkleTV show America Ron Stoppableis titular character Kim Possible's sidekick and best friend. He has a naked mole-rat named Rufus.
2003 Sex and the City TV series United States Charlotte (Kristin Davis) converts to Judaism in the beginning of season six so that she can marry Harry Goldenblatt, the man who had been her divorce attorney and whom she fell in love with.[142]
2003 Ruth Weinstein,
Hannah Weinstein
Rosenstrasse Margarethe von Trotta (director)
von Trotta and Pamela Katz (screenplay)
FilmGermanyAfter her husband's death, Ruth Weinstein, who is living in New York at the turn of the 21st century, becomes traumatized by memories from her youth and "inexplicably" begins following Orthodox Jewish customs. This triggers her adult daughter, Hannah, to travel back to Germany where she discovers that her grandmother (Ruth's mother) had been arrested by the Nazis and held in a prison on Rossenstrasse. As a little girl on the street outside the prison, Ruth had been found and eventually cared for by a Gentile woman who was successfully protesting there for the release of her Jewish husband.[143]
2003 Mordechai Jefferson Carver The Hebrew HammerFilm United States In this Jewish take on Blaxploitation films, Adam Goldberg plays the Jewish Mordechai Jefferson Carver, also known as The Hebrew Hammer, who protects the Jewish community from the evil son of Santa Claus who wants to destroy Hanukkah so that everyone will celebrate Christmas. The film "derives its humor from the awkward juxtaposition of Jewish and African American stereotypes."[144]
2003 Seth Cohen The OCTV series United States
2003 Anthony Goldstein Harry PotterNovel England Ravenclaw student in Harry's year of school and member of Dumbledore's army.
2004 Jakob Zuckermann, aka Jaecki Zucker,
Samuel Zuckerman
Alles auf Zucker! Film Germany Jaecki, his wife and his children, who actually have no knowledge of Jewish traditions, pretend to be ultra-orthodox when Jaecki's brother Samuel comes back to town and they must mourn the death of their mother according to Jewish ritual in order to receive their inheritance.[145]
2004Samantha "Sam" MansonDanny PhantomButch HartmanAnimated TV seriesUnited StatesThe main heroine of the series, Sam Manson is a conservative vegetarian and animal rights activist who refuses to eat anything with a face. Her grandmother refers to her as "Bubaleh" and her wealthy family is seen practicing their Jewish faith in the episode "The Fright Before Christmas".
2005Jane Smith Mr. & Mrs. Smith Simon Kinberg, author
Doug Liman, director
Film United States In a throwaway gag at the end of the film when Jane (Angelina Jolie) and her husband are confessing secrets to each other, Jane, who is secretly an assassin, reveals that she is Jewish. The presentation of a tough, physically active woman as Jewish provides a counter-view to the stereotypical "Jewish American Princess" or "Jewish mother" images often presented in the media.[146]
2005Andy Botwin, Judah Botwin (deceased), Yael Hoffman, Rabbi David Bloom, Lennie Botwin, Shane Botwin, Silas Botwin, Stevie Botwin-Reyes-Bloom "Weeds" Jenji Kohan (creator) TV series United States The Botwins are "dealing" in suburbia.
2005Ziva DavidNCISDonald P. Bellisario (Creator)TV seriesUnited StatesThe character Ziva David is an Israeli Jew who first appears in season 3 and last appears in season 17.
2006Simon Goldberg Dresden Roland Suso Richter (director)
Stefan Kolditz (screenplay)
TV miniseriesGermany In this film that is one of the initial exemplars of the "German suffering genre", the Jewish character, Simon, is portrayed as "emasculated" in comparison to both the virile British pilot portrayed in the film and the historically lecherous portrayal of Jewish males by the Nazi regime in the time period in which the film is set.[147] [148]
2006Rabbi Russell StoneThe ShivahDave Gilbert (game designer)Adventure gameUnited StatesIn The Shivah players play as a Rabbi named Russell Stone.
2007 Mad Men TV series United StatesRachel is a department store executive and love interest for Don Draper[149] on season one of Mad Men who is " a tribute to the attractiveness of independent-minded Jewish women, the Draper-Menken affair is a commentary on the place of Jews in the American myth".[150]
2007 April Epner Then She Found Me Helen Hunt (director); Hunt, Alice Arlen, Victor Levin (screenplay) Film United States April is presented as a devout Jew, a character type that Joanna Smith Rakoff says is a rare thing in cinema.[151]
2007 Phineas and Ferb Dan Povenmire,
Jeff "Swampy" Marsh
TV series United StatesIsabella Garcia-Shapiro is a Jewish Mexican American girl.[152] She is one of the brothers' best friends and has an obvious crush on Phineas Flynn of which he is unaware, though he has shown he cares for her from time to time. She is known for the catchphrase, "Whatcha doin'?" (which she doesn't like when other people besides Phineas say) and is the leader of the Fireside Girls troop 46231. The troop often helps Phineas and Ferb in their projects.[153] Vivian Garcia-Shapiro, or simply "Viv", is Isabella's mother and one of Linda's best friends, and plays upright bass in a jazz band with Linda Flynn and Jeremy's mom.
2009 Glee Ryan Murphy,
Brad Falchuk,
Ian Brennan
TV series United States In the episode "Mash-Up" Puck attempts to be a "good Jew," and sings songs by real-life Jewish performers such as Neil Diamond.[154]
2009Annie EdisonCommunityDan HarmonTV seriesUnited StatesAnnie's Judaism is revealed when Shirley tries to get her to participate in her Christmas party, and is brought up a few times throughout the show when the topic of religion surfaces as a hot-button issue for the study group.
2009Danny SexbangNinja Sex PartyDan Avidan, Brian WechtComedy BandUnited StatesDanny Sexbang is a Jewish superhero who wears a unitard, with his best friend who's a ninja, and together they sing songs about dicks, and try to hit [unsuccessfully] on women. Danny very proudly displays his Jewish heritage and frequently uses it as a feature in his comedy as well as wooing of Women. Danny Sexbang is portrayed by Dan Avidan, who is also Jewish.
2010Velma DinkleyScooby-Doo! Mystery IncorporatedMitch Watson, Spike Brandt and Tony CervoneAnimated TV seriesUnited StatesVelma Dinkley is one of the show's protagonists, a teenage detective who is implied to be Jewish: she listens to Klezmer music, and frequently exclaims "Oy!" and "Oy gevalt"[155]
2011Winston SchmidtNew GirlElizabeth MeriwetherTV seriesUnited StatesSchmidt's Jewish identity is mentioned throughout the show. On episode 5 of season 3, Schmidt seeks out the advice of his rabbi. When Schmidt and Cece get married at the end of season 5, the wedding ceremony is a mixed Jewish-Indian one. Like his character, actor Max Greenfield is Jewish.[156]
2012Felicity SmoakArrowGreg Berlanti, Marc Guggenheim, Andrew KreisbergTV seriesUnited StatesFelicity Smoak is half-Jewish from her mother (of which she took the surname). Felicity says she is Jewish for the first time, in episode nine of season 1.
2013Jake PeraltaBrooklyn Nine-NineDan Goor, Michael SchurTV seriesUnited StatesJake is half-Jewish, through his mother Karen Peralta. He is non-practicing, and is generally unenthused by religious or communal tradition, such as Thanksgiving or Passover. However, he seems to respect and enjoy his mother's Judaism, serving a Passover Brisket (along with other things) to his coworkers when he's released from prison "cause you know I loves my mom". He had a Bar Mitzvah when he was 13, where he started to obsess over his crush, Jenny Gildenhorn. It is implied that he grew up around other Jewish children, attending Bar and Bat mitzvahs throughout his childhood.
2014Maura Pfefferman, Shelly Pfefferman, Sarah Pfefferman, Ali Pfefferman, Josh Pfefferman, Raquel FeinTransparentJill SolowayTV seriesUnited StatesThe series depicts several Jewish characters and deals with spiritually and culturally Jewish themes. Jill Soloway, the series' primary creator, is Jewish and uses Rabbi Susan Goldberg of Wilshire Boulevard Temple as a consultant for the show. They also seek advice from Rabbi Amichai Lau-Lavie of New York, describing him as "a God-optional patriarchy-toppling Jewish modern mind. There's a mandate among religious and spiritual thinkers to be thinking about the binary, the gendered, the feminist, the goddess, and Amichai reminds me of that every day." The focus is mainly on the Jewish experience as viewed through the dual prisms of Reform Judaism and Jewish cultural identity.[157]
2016NeilCamp CampMiles Luna, Jordan Cwierz Web series United States One of the main characters of the series, Neil is confirmed to be Jewish in the episode "Reigny Day" when a bully mentions he doesn't bully Neil on the Sabbath. Later, he boasts about his religion in "Culture Day" to try to look cool in the eyes of the other campers, but ultimately comes clean when the campers mob him demanding answers.
2017 Missy Foreman-Greenwald Big Mouth Nick Kroll, Andrew Goldberg, Jennifer Flackett, Mark LevinTV show America
2018Kate Kane / Batwoman, Beth Kane / AliceBatwomanCaroline DriesTV seriesUnited StatesThe main title hero, Kate Kane is a Batman cousin, lesbian superhero, played by Ruby Rose.[158] Her twin sister Beth, the super-villain, played by Rachel Skarsten. A scene of their Bat Mitvah was filmed and deleted, but they hold a picture of both from that Bat Mitvah.
2021Abigail StoneSpirit UntamedAnimated FilmUnited StatesAbigail Stone is of Jewish and German ancestry, and a friend of Lucky Prescott and Pru Granger. Her Jewish heritage isn't revealed in the movie, but Kerim Kurun of White House Studios alleges that Abigail is jewish.
2021Libby Stein-TorresThe Ghost and Molly McGeeBill Motz, Bob RothTV seriesUnited StatesLibby is of Jewish and Hispanic ancestry, and a friend of title character Molly McGee. Libby's Jewish heritage is revealed in the episode "Mazel Tov, Libby!", where her Bat Mitzvah is celebrated.[159]
2022Sammy FabelmanThe FabelmansSteven Spielberg,Tony KushnerFilmUnited StatesLoosely based on Spielberg, the film's director, Sammy and his family are Jewish and this is introduced early in the film during the Hanukkah montage. He was played by Canadian actor Gabriel LaBelle, who was raised Jewish.[160]
2023Casey Goldberg-CalderonMoon Girl and Devil DinosaurSteve Loter, Jeffrey M. Howard, Kate KondellTV seriesUnited StatesIn the episode, “Today, I Am a Woman”, Casey has Shabbat dinner and a Bat Mitvah.[161]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Dennis, Geoffrey W. . The Encyclopedia of Jewish Myth, Magic and Mysticism . 2007-01-01 . Llewellyn Worldwide . 9780738709055 . 65– . 13 February 2014.
  2. Book: Veidlinger, Jeffrey . Jewish Public Culture in the Late Russian Empire . 2009-04-14 . Indiana University Press . 9780253002983 . 87– . 15 February 2014.
  3. Book: Gardner, Martin. From the Wandering Jew to William F. Buckley, Jr: On Science, Literature, and Religion. 15 February 2014. Prometheus Books, Publishers. 9781615929344. 2010-06-02.
  4. Book: Child, Francis James. English and Scottish ballads, selected and ed. by F.J. Child. 10 March 2014. 1857. 4–.
  5. Book: Correale. Robert M.. Hamel. Mary. Sources and Analogues of the Canterbury Tales. 10 March 2014. 2005-01-01. DS Brewer. 9781843840480. 591–.
  6. Book: Dundes, Alan. The Blood Libel Legend: A Casebook in Anti-Semitic Folklore. 10 March 2014. 1991-10-15. Univ of Wisconsin Press. 9780299131142. 72–.
  7. Book: Weaver, Elissa. The Decameron First Day in Perspective: Volume One of the Lecturae Boccaccii. 10 March 2014. 2004. University of Toronto Press. 9780802085894. 77–.
  8. Book: Cheney. Patrick. Cheney. Patrick Gerard. The Cambridge Companion to Christopher Marlowe. 10 March 2014. 2004-07-15. Cambridge University Press. 9780521527347. 262–.
  9. Book: Kastan, David Scott. Staging the Renaissance: Reinterpretations of Elizabethan and Jacobean Drama. 10 March 2014. 1991. Psychology Press. 9780415901666. 114–.
  10. Book: Ephraim, Michelle. Reading the Jewish Woman on the Elizabethan Stage. 12 March 2014. 2008. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd.. 9780754690009. 113–.
  11. Book: Shylock: A Legend and Its Legacy. 1994-01-04. Simon and Schuster. 9780671883867. 348–.
  12. Book: Shakespeare, William. Shakespeare's Principal Plays. 12 March 2014. 1922. Century Company. 88–.
  13. Book: Lampert, Lisa. Gender and Jewish Difference from Paul to Shakespeare. 12 March 2014. 2011-01-01. University of Pennsylvania Press. 9780812202557.
  14. Book: Davis, Elizabeth B.. Myth and Identity in the Epic of Imperial Spain. 9 March 2014. 2000-12-01. University of Missouri Press. 9780826262158. 196–.
  15. Book: Merry, Bruce. Encyclopedia of Modern Greek Literature. 21 March 2014. 2004. Greenwood Publishing Group. 9780313308130.
  16. Book: Bardakjian, Kevork B.. A Reference Guide to Modern Armenian Literature, 1500-1920: With an Introductory History. 21 March 2014. 2000. Wayne State University Press. 9780814327470. 62–.
  17. Book: Levy, Richard S.. Antisemitism: A Historical Encyclopedia of Prejudice and Persecution. 24 February 2014. 2005-01-01. ABC-CLIO. 9781851094394. 545–.
  18. Book: Levine, Gary. The Merchant of Modernism: The Economic Jew in Anglo-American Literature, 1864-1939. 5 March 2014. 2013-12-16. Routledge. 9781136719172. 24–.
  19. Book: Page, Judith. Imperfect Sympathies: Jews and Judaism in British Romantic Literature and Culture. 5 March 2014. 2004-09-18. Palgrave Macmillan. 9781403980472. 36–.
  20. Book: Harap, Louis. The Image of the Jew in American Literature: From Early Republic to Mass Immigration. 22 February 2014. 1974. Syracuse University Press. 9780815629917. 34–.
  21. Book: Rosenberg, Edgar. From Shylock to Svengali: Jewish Stereotypes in English Fiction. 13 February 2014. 1960. Stanford University Press. 9780804705868.
  22. Book: Livak, Leonid. The Jewish Persona in the European Imagination: A Case of Russian Literature. 18 February 2014. 2010-09-10. Stanford University Press. 9780804775625. 110–.
  23. Book: Hess. Jonathan. Samuels. Maurice. Vaiman. Nadia. Nineteenth-Century Jewish Literature: A Reader. 22 March 2014. 2013-05-15. Stanford University Press. 9780804786195. 293–.
  24. Book: Conway, David. Jewry in Music. 16 February 2014. 2012. Cambridge University Press. 9781139505352. 217–.
  25. Book: Wertheim. David J.. Frishman. Judith. Haan. Ido de. Borders and Boundaries in and Around Dutch Jewish History. 14 February 2014. 2011. Amsterdam University Press. 9789052603872. 92–.
  26. Book: Hallman, Diana R.. Opera, Liberalism, and Antisemitism in Nineteenth-Century France: The Politics of Halévy's La Juive. 14 February 2014. 2007-08-16. Cambridge University Press. 9780521038812. 20–.
  27. Book: Porter. Stanley E.. Pearson. Brook W.. Christian-Jewish Relations Through the Centuries. 14 February 2014. 2004-12-19. Continuum. 9780567041708. 311–.
  28. Book: Ragussis, Michael. Figures of Conversion: "the Jewish Question" & English National Identity. 14 February 2014. 1995. Duke University Press. 9780822315704. 50–.
  29. Book: Dianne Ashton. Jewish Folklore and Ethnology Review. https://books.google.com/books?id=vGnYAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA22. 14 March 2014. 12. 1–12. 1990. Simon Bronner. 22–. Grace Aguila's Popular Theology and the Female Response to Evangelists.
  30. Book: Rose, Alison. Jewish Women in Fin de Siècle Vienna. 22 February 2014. 2009-09-15. University of Texas Press. 9780292774643. 214–.
  31. Book: Ragussis, Michael. Theatrical Nation: Jews and Other Outlandish Englishmen in Georgian Britain. 26 February 2014. 2012-05-22. University of Pennsylvania Press. 9780812207934. 203–.
  32. Book: Schaffer, Talia. Novel Craft: Victorian Domestic Handicraft and Nineteenth-Century Fiction. 14 February 2014. 2011-09-23. Oxford University Press. 9780195398045. 139–.
  33. Book: Lindemann, Albert S.. Esau's Tears: Modern Anti-Semitism and the Rise of the Jews. 14 February 2014. 1997. Cambridge University Press. 9780521795388. 93–.
  34. Book: Newton, K.M.. Modernizing George Eliot: The Writer as Artist, Intellectual, Proto-Modernist, Cultural Critic. 26 February 2014. 2011-12-08. Bloomsbury Publishing PLC. 9781849664981. 143–.
  35. Book: Harap, Louis. The Image of the Jew in American Literature: From Early Republic to Mass Immigration. 24 February 2014. 1974. Syracuse University Press. 9780815629917. 125–.
  36. Book: Peretz, I. L.. The I. L. Peretz Reader. 10 March 2014. 2013-10-15. Yale University Press. 9781480440784.
  37. Book: Solomon, Alisa. Wonder of Wonders: A Cultural History of Fiddler on the Roof. 14 February 2014. 2013-10-22. Henry Holt and Company. 9780805095296.
  38. Book: DuMaurier, George. Trilbyf. 14 December 2015. 2015-12-14. Oxford. 9780199538805.
  39. Book: Rozenberg, Yehudah Yudl. The Golem and the Wondrous Deeds of the Maharal of Prague. 2 March 2014. 2007. Yale University Press. 9780300134728.
  40. Book: Wenger, Beth S.. The Jewish Americans: Three Centuries of Jewish Voices in America. 6 March 2014. 2007. Doubleday. 9780385521390. 207–.
  41. Book: Grossman, Barbara W.. Funny Woman. 6 March 2014. 1992-08-01. Indiana University Press. 9780253207623. 31–.
  42. Book: Slide, Anthony. The Encyclopedia of Vaudeville. 3 March 2014. 2012. Univ. Press of Mississippi. 9781617032509. 108–.
  43. Book: Kelman, Ari Y.. Is Diss a System?: A Milt Gross Comic Reader. 4 March 2014. 2009-12-09. NYU Press. 9780814748374. 28–.
  44. Book: Erens, Patricia. The Jew in American Cinema. 1988-01-01. Indiana University Press. 9780253204936. 451–. - Access date: 4 March 2014.
  45. Book: Topping, Margaret. Proust's Gods: Christian and Mythological Figures of Speech in the Works of Marcel Proust. 22 March 2014. 2000. Oxford University Press. 9780198160083. 99–.
  46. Book: Who's Who in Proust. 9781425760298. Alexander. Patrick. May 2007.
  47. Book: Cohen. Derek. Heller. Deborah. Jewish Presences in English Literature. 13 February 2014. 1990-09-01. McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP. 9780773507814. 96–.
  48. Book: Davison, Neil R.. James Joyce, Ulysses, and the Construction of Jewish Identity: Culture, Biography, and 'the Jew' in Modernist Europe. 13 February 2014. 1998-09-24. Cambridge University Press. 9780521636209. 1–.
  49. Book: Bruccoli . Matthew Joseph . Matthew J. Bruccoli . F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby: A Literary Reference . 2000 . Carroll & Graf Publishers . New York . 0-7867-0996-0 .
  50. Book: McDonald, Jarom. Sports, Narrative, and Nation in the Fiction of F. Scott Fitzgerald. 24 February 2014. 2008-03-25. Routledge. 9781135860738. 193–.
  51. Book: Gandal, Keith. The Gun and the Pen: Hemingway, Fitzgerald, Faulkner, and the Fiction of Mobilization. 24 February 2014. 2010-05-06. Oxford University Press, USA. 9780199744572. 132–.
  52. Book: Rubin, Rachel. Jewish Gangsters of Modern Literature. 13 March 2014. 2000. University of Illinois Press. 9780252025396. 26–.
  53. Book: Katz, Maya Balakirsky. Revising Dreyfus. 21 March 2014. 2013-07-11. BRILL. 9789004256958. 71–.
  54. Book: Dunn, Robert. Ernest Hemingway's the Sun Also Rises. 14 March 2014. 1984-01-01. Barron's Educational Series. 9780764191268. 14–.
  55. Book: Boon, Kevin Alexander. Ernest Hemingway: The Sun Also Rises and Other Works. 14 March 2014. 2008. Marshall Cavendish. 9780761425908. 65–.
  56. Book: Erens, Patricia. The Jew in American Cinema. 14 February 2014. 1988-01-01. Indiana University Press. 9780253204936. 185–.
  57. Book: Knapp. Raymond. Morris. Mitchell. Wolf. Stacy. The Oxford Handbook of The American Musical. 16 February 2014. 2011-11-04. Oxford University Press. 9780195385946. 201–.
  58. Book: Sicherman. Barbara. Green. Carol Hurd. Notable American Women: The Modern Period : a Biographical Dictionary. 14 February 2014. 1980. Harvard University Press. 9780674627338. 74–.
  59. Book: Silver. Best Jewish Books for Children and Teens: A JPS Guide. 4 March 2014. 2011-01-01. Jewish Publication Society. 9780827611214. 11–.
  60. Book: Wisse, Ruth R.. The Modern Jewish Canon: A Journey Through Language and Culture. 11 March 2014. 2003-04-15. University of Chicago Press. 9780226903187. 147–.
  61. Book: Stavans, Ilan. Singer's Typewriter and Mine: Reflections on Jewish Culture. 11 March 2014. 2012-11-01. U of Nebraska Press. 9780803271463. 173–.
  62. Book: Frank, Armin Paul. Off-canon Pleasures: A Case Study and a Perspective. 21 February 2014. 2011. Universitätsverlag Göttingen. 9783941875951. 13–.
  63. Book: Nelson, Emmanuel Sampath. The Greenwood Encyclopedia of Multiethnic American Literature: I - M. 22 February 2014. 2005. Greenwood Publishing Group. 9780313330629. 1153–.
  64. Book: Carter, David John. A Career in Writing: Judah Waten and the Cultural Politics of a Literary Career. 10 March 2014. 1993. National Library Australia. 2–.
  65. Book: Mycak. Sonia. Sarwal. Amit. Australian Made: A Multicultural Reader. 10 March 2014. 2010-01-01. Sydney University Press. 9781920899363. 33–.
  66. Book: Bartov, Omer. The "Jew" in Cinema: From The Golem to Don't Touch My Holocaust. 23 March 2014. 2005-01-01. Indiana University Press. 9780253217455.
  67. Book: Cesarani. David. Sundquist. Eric J.. After the Holocaust: Challenging the Myth of Silence. 23 March 2014. 2011-09-30. Routledge. 9781136631726. 175–.
  68. Book: Conn. Peter. Conn. Peter J.. Pearl S. Buck: A Cultural Biography. 20 February 2014. 1998-01-28. Cambridge University Press. 9780521639897. 438–.
  69. Book: Baskin. Judith R.. Baskin. Judith Reesa. The Cambridge Dictionary of Judaism and Jewish Culture. 14 March 2014. 2011-08-31. Cambridge University Press. 9780521825979. 182–.
  70. Book: Westfahl. Gary. Slusser. George Edgar. Leiby. David. Worlds Enough and Time: Explorations of Time in Science Fiction and Fantasy. 14 February 2014. 2002-01-01. Greenwood Publishing Group. 9780313317064. 88–.
  71. Book: Silbiger, Steve. The Jewish Phenomenon: Seven Keys to the Enduring Wealth of a People. 14 February 2014. 2000-05-25. Taylor Trade Publications. 9781563525667. 113–.
  72. Book: Symons, Alex. Mel Brooks in the Cultural Industries: Survival and Prolonged Adaptation. 14 February 2014. 2012-09-30. Oxford University Press. 9780748664504. 89–.
  73. Book: Gavriely-Nuri, Dalia. Israeli Culture on the Road to the Yom Kippur War. 14 March 2014. 2014-02-27. Lexington Books. 9780739185957. 51–.
  74. Book: Bar-Tal/Teichman. Stereotypes and Prejudice in Conflict: Representations of Arabs in Israeli Jewish Society. 14 March 2014. 2004. Cambridge University Press. 9781139441636. 192–.
  75. Book: Gilman, Sander L.. Smart Jews: The Construction of the Image of Jewish Superior Intelligence. 13 February 2014. 1997. U of Nebraska Press. 9780803270695. 181–.
  76. Book: Antler, Joyce. Talking Back: Images of Jewish Women in American Popular Culture. 13 February 2014. 1998. UPNE. 9780874518429. 187–.
  77. Book: Preston. Peter. Simpson-Housley. Paul. Writing the City: Eden, Babylon and the New Jerusalem. 11 March 2014. 2002-01-31. Routledge. 9781134843688. 120–.
  78. Book: Rosen, Alan. Literature of the Holocaust. 11 March 2014. 2013-11-14. Cambridge University Press. 9781107008656. 146–.
  79. Web site: Godoski . Andrew . Professor X And Magneto: Allegories For Martin Luther King, Jr. And Malcolm X . Screened . 2011-06-01 . 2012-08-18 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20131109071039/http://www.screened.com/news/professor-x-and-magneto-allegories-for-martin-luther-king-jr-and-malcolm-x/2316/ . 2013-11-09 .
  80. News: Shutt . Craig . August 1997 . Bad is Good . . 72 . 38.
  81. Web site: (Orthodo)X-Men, On Screen and Off, Irving Greenberg, Jewish Daily Forward, 13 June 2003 . Forward.com . 2003-06-13 . 2012-08-18.
  82. Web site: (Orthodo)X-Men. Ami. Eden. 2003-05-23. Jewish Daily Forward.
  83. Web site: Magneto. www.ign.com. IGN. 5 June 2014.
  84. Book: Delamater. Jerome. Prigozy. Ruth. The Detective in American Fiction, Film, and Television. 17 February 2014. 1998. Greenwood Publishing Group. 9780313304637. 57–.
  85. Book: Sternlicht, Sanford. Masterpieces of Jewish American Literature. 17 February 2014. 2007-01-01. Greenwood Publishing Group. 9780313338571. 87–.
  86. Book: Sloan, Johanne. Urban Enigmas: Montreal, Toronto, and the Problem of Comparing Cities. 23 March 2014. 2007-01-01. McGill-Queen's University Press. 9780773577077. 263–.
  87. Book: Gilman, Sander L.. Jewish Frontiers: Essays on Bodies, Histories, and Identities. 18 February 2014. 2003. Palgrave Macmillan. 9780312295325. 76–.
  88. Book: Koltun-Fromm, Ken. Material Culture and Jewish Thought in America. 15 February 2014. 2010-04-21. Indiana University Press. 9780253004161. 225–.
  89. Book: Rosenberg, Warren. Legacy of Rage: Jewish Masculinity, Violence, and Culture. 16 February 2014. 2009-06-01. Univ of Massachusetts Press. 9781558497900. 189–.
  90. Book: Hoffman, Warren. The Passing Game: Queering Jewish American Culture. 15 February 2014. 2009. Syracuse University Press. 9780815632023. 118–.
  91. https://web.archive.org/web/20071015031202/http://www.juf.org/tweens/celebrity.aspx?id=10964 Jewish United Fund
  92. Book: Figge. Susan G.. Ward. Jenifer K.. Reworking the German Past: Adaptations in Film, the Arts, and Popular Culture. 21 February 2014. 2010. Camden House. 9781571134448. 95–.
  93. Book: Sheinin. David. Barr. Lois Baer. The Jewish Diaspora in Latin America: New Studies on History and Literature. 22 March 2014. 1996. Taylor & Francis. 9780815322832.
  94. Book: Gooblar, David. The Major Phases of Philip Roth. 14 February 2014. 2011-09-01. Continuum. 9781441169709. 77–.
  95. Book: Antler, Joyce. Talking Back: Images of Jewish Women in American Popular Culture. 17 February 2014. 1998. UPNE. 9780874518429. 243–.
  96. Book: Press, Caddo Gap. Taboo. 14 March 2014. 2003. Caddo Gap Press. 9780874518429. 40–.
  97. Web site: Moon Knight's New Backstory Just Made Him Marvel's Most Complicated Hero. . 29 March 2022. 19 Nov 2021.
  98. Book: Lockhart, Darrell B.. Jewish Writers of Latin America: A Dictionary. 24 February 2014. 2013-08-21. Routledge. 9781134754205. 1–.
  99. Book: Cohen, Sarah Blacher. Jewish Wry: Essays on Jewish Humor. 16 February 2014. 1990. Wayne State University Press. 9780814323663. 131–.
  100. Book: Lockhart, Darrell B.. Jewish Writers of Latin America: A Dictionary. 27 April 2014. 2013-08-21. Routledge. 9781134754205. 376–.
  101. Book: Reinhartz. Adele. Reinhartz. Professor in the Department of Religious Studies Adele. Bible and Cinema: An Introduction. 13 February 2014. 2013-10-08. Routledge. 9781134627011. 77–.
  102. Book: Ndalianis, Angela. The Contemporary Comic Book Superhero. 14 February 2014. 2008-10-23. Routledge. 9781135213947. 184–.
  103. Book: Kaplan, Arie. From Krakow to Krypton: Jews and Comic Books. 15 February 2014. 2010-01-01. Jewish Publication Society. 9780827610439. 122–.
  104. Book: Budick, Emily Miller. Aharon Appelfeld's Fiction: Acknowledging the Holocaust. 11 March 2014. 2005-01-17. Indiana University Press. 9780253111067. 153–.
  105. Michael Taub. February 1997. Fables of loss and delusion: a review essay. Modern Judaism. 17. 1. 91–96. March 9, 2014. 10.1093/mj/17.1.91. 170475026.
  106. News: SUMMER READING; FICTION THAT IS WORLDS APART. Grace Schulman. June 2, 1985. New York Times. 4 March 2014.
  107. Book: Friedman, Jonathan C.. Rainbow Jews: Jewish and Gay Identity in the Performing Arts. 13 February 2014. 2007. Lexington Books. 9780739114483. 77–.
  108. Book: Houtman. Dick. Meyer. Birgit. Things:: Religion and the Question of Materiality. 10 March 2014. 2012-09-12. Fordham Univ Press. 9780823239450. 128–.
  109. Book: Simon, John Ivan. John Simon on Film: Criticism, 1982-2001. 10 March 2014. 2005. Applause Theatre & Cinema Books. 9781557835079. 49–.
  110. Book: Cohen, Sarah Blacher. Jewish Wry: Essays on Jewish Humor. 16 February 2014. 1990. Wayne State University Press. 9780814323663. 121–.
  111. Book: Parish, James Robert. Gays and lesbians in mainstream cinema: plots, critiques, casts and credits for 272 theatrical and made-for-television Hollywood releases. 26 February 2014. 1993. McFarland & Co.. 9780899507910.
  112. Book: Baskin. Judith R.. Baskin. Judith Reesa. The Cambridge Dictionary of Judaism and Jewish Culture. 17 February 2014. 2011-08-31. Cambridge University Press. 9780521825979. 589–.
  113. Book: Yelin, Louise. Karen Lawrence. "Decolonizing the Novel" in Decolonizing Tradition: New Views of Twentieth-century "British" Literary Canons. 9 March 2014. 1992. University of Illinois Press. 9780252061936. 191–.
  114. Book: Henry, Matthew A.. The Simpsons, Satire, and American Culture. 13 February 2014. 2012-09-25. Palgrave Macmillan. 9781137027795. 62–.
  115. Book: Lavery. David. Dunne. Sara Lewis. Seinfeld, Master of Its Domain: Revisiting Television's Greatest Sitcom. 16 February 2014. 2006-01-20. Continuum. 9780826418036. 244–.
  116. Book: Pearl. Jonathan. Pearl. Judith. The Chosen Image: Television's Portrayal of Jewish Themes and Characters. 14 February 2014. 1999. McFarland. 9780786405220. 99–.
  117. Book: Pearl. Jonathan. Pearl. Judith. The Chosen Image: Television's Portrayal of Jewish Themes and Characters. 27 February 2014. 1999. McFarland. 9780786405220. 92–.
  118. Book: Stan, Susan. The World Through Children's Books. 12 March 2014. 2002. Rowman & Littlefield. 9780810841987. 121–.
  119. Book: Kaufman, David. Jewhooing the Sixties: American Celebrity and Jewish Identity; Sandy Koufax, Lenny Bruce, Bob Dylan, and Barbra Streisand. 13 February 2014. 2012. UPNE. 9781611683158. 257–.
  120. Book: Ciociola, Gail. Wendy Wasserstein: Dramatizing Women, Their Choices and Their Boundaries. 14 February 2014. 2005-01-01. McFarland. 9780786423170. 99–.
  121. Book: Fahraeus. Anna. Jonsson. AnnKatrin. Textual Ethos Studies, Or Locating Ethics. 4 March 2014. 2005-01-01. Rodopi. 9789042017979. 220–.
  122. Book: Ferrari, Chiara Francesca. Since When Is Fran Drescher Jewish?: Dubbing Stereotypes in The Nanny, The Simpsons, and The Sopranos. 14 February 2014. 2011-01-15. University of Texas Press. 9780292739550. 55–.
  123. Book: Brook, Vincent. Something Ain't Kosher Here: The Rise of the "Jewish" Sitcom. 14 February 2014. 2003. Rutgers University Press. 9780813532110. 127–.
  124. Book: Rosa, Debora Cordeiro. Trauma, Memory and Identity in Five Jewish Novels from the Southern Cone. 23 March 2014. 2012-04-19. Lexington Books. 9780739172988.
  125. Book: Gilman, Sander L.. Multiculturalism and the Jews. 22 March 2014. 2006. Taylor & Francis. 9780415979184. 179–.
  126. Book: Abramson, Glenda. Encyclopedia of Modern Jewish Culture. 10 March 2014. 2013-04-15. Routledge. 9781134428656. 602–.
  127. Book: Applegate, Katherine . Elfangor's secret . 1999 . Scholastic . 0-590-03639-4 . New York, N.Y. . 10, 171 . 41260940.
  128. Book: Ibsen, Kristine. The Other Mirror: Women's Narrative in Mexico, 1980-1995. 22 February 2014. 1997-01-01. Greenwood Publishing Group. 9780313301803. 159–.
  129. Book: Agosín, Marjorie. Invisible Dreamer: Memory, Judaism, and Human Rights. 22 February 2014. 2002-03-01. S. Asher Pub.. 9781890932190.
  130. Book: Gournelos, Ted. Popular Culture and the Future of Politics: Cultural Studies and the Tao of South Park. 14 February 2014. 2009. Rowm≤an & Littlefield. 9780739137215. 168–.
  131. Book: Gournelos, Ted. Popular Culture and the Future of Politics: Cultural Studies and the Tao of South Park. 16 February 2014. 2009. Rowman & Littlefield. 9780739137215. 166–.
  132. Book: Hammer. Rhonda. Kellner. Douglas. Media/cultural Studies: Critical Approaches. 16 February 2014. 2009. Peter Lang. 9780820495262. 362–.
  133. Book: Rubin, Lois E.. Connections and Collisions: Identities in Contemporary Jewish-American Women's Writing. 12 March 2014. 2005. University of Delaware Press. 9780874138993. 142–.
  134. Book: Vassanji, M.G.. A Place Within: Rediscovering India. 22 March 2014. 2009-09-15. Doubleday Canada. 9780307372628. 327–.
  135. Book: Katz, Nathan. Who are the Jews of India?. 22 March 2014. 2000. University of California Press. 9780520213234. 6–.
  136. Book: Merwin, Ted. In Their Own Image: New York Jews in Jazz Age Popular Culture. 13 February 2014. 2006. Rutgers University Press. 9780813538099. 173–.
  137. Web site: Family Guy . www.parentstv.org . 12 January 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20130508234500/http://www.parentstv.org/PTC/publications/bw/2007/0406worst.asp . 8 May 2013 . dead.
  138. Web site: Family Guy on Fox -- 10-09-09 . www.parentstv.org . 12 January 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100106235838/http://www.parentstv.org/ptc/publications/bw/2009/1009worst.asp . 6 January 2010 . dead.
  139. Web site: Parents Television Council . 2013-03-15 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20130623135715/http://w2.parentstv.org/Main/News/Detail.aspx?docID=2748 . 2013-06-23 .
  140. News: Timblick . Simon . Doctors spoilers: WHO puts a smile on Valerie Pitman's face? . 4 June 2022 . . (Future plc).
  141. Book: Tew, Philip. Reading Zadie Smith: The First Decade and Beyond. 22 February 2014. 2013-12-05. A&C Black. 9781472517166.
  142. Book: Sohn. Amy. Wildman. Sarah. Sex and the City: Kiss and Tell. 13 March 2014. 2004-02-23. Simon and Schuster. 9780743457309. 164–.
  143. Book: Fisher. Jaimey. Prager. Brad. The Collapse of the Conventional: German Film and Its Politics at the Turn of the Twenty-first Century. 16 February 2014. 2010. Wayne State University Press. 9780814333778. 109–.
  144. Book: Gillota, David. Ethnic Humor in Multiethnic America. 21 March 2014. 2013-07-01. Rutgers University Press. 9780813561509. 49–.
  145. Book: Preece. Julian. Finlay. Frank. Crowe. Sinéad. Religion and Identity in Germany Today: Doubters, Believers, Seekers in Literature and Film. 21 February 2014. 2010. Peter Lang. 9783034301565. 44–.
  146. Book: Abrams, Nathan. The New Jew in Film: Exploring Jewishness and Judaism in Contemporary Cinema. 13 February 2014. 2012-03-12. Rutgers University Press. 9780813553436. 127–.
  147. Book: Dorchain. Claudia Simone. Wonnenberg. Felice Naomi. Contemporary Jewish Reality in Germany and Its Reflection in Film. 15 February 2014. 2012-12-06. Walter de Gruyter. 9783110265132. 17–.
  148. Book: Dorchain. Claudia Simone. Wonnenberg. Felice Naomi. Contemporary Jewish Reality in Germany and Its Reflection in Film. 15 February 2014. 2012-12-06. Walter de Gruyter. 9783110265132. 139–.
  149. Book: South. James B.. Carveth. Rod. Mad Men and Philosophy: Nothing Is as It Seems. 13 February 2014. 2010-05-11. John Wiley & Sons. 9780470649237. 107–.
  150. Web site: 'Mad Men': Bring Back the Smart, Scrupulous, Sultry Jewess. Seltzer. Sarah. 13 August 2009. The Jewish Daily Forward. 31 October 2010.
  151. News: Finding Her Religion. Joanna Smith Rakoff. June 12, 2008. Tablet Magazine. 14 February 2014.
  152. Picture This. Phineas and Ferb. 2. Disney Channel.
  153. Web site: Characters - Phineas and Ferb - Disney XD. disney.go.com. 4 May 2018. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20130506141745/http://disney.go.com/xd/phineasandferb/biographies/. 6 May 2013.
  154. Book: Balser. Erin. Gardner. Suzanne. Don't Stop Believin': The Unofficial Guide to Glee. 17 December 2010. 18–. 9781554908943.
  155. Web site: How Scooby-Doo became TV's most Jewish cartoon dog. 2020-08-28. The Forward. en. 2022-04-13.
  156. News: Interview with Max Greenfield of the New Girl. Sirota. Lauren Bans, Peggy. 2011-01-10. GQ. 2018-03-29. en.
  157. News: Jill Soloway on Jews and 'Transparent' Hadassah Magazine. 2016-09-19. Hadassah Magazine. 2018-03-29. en-US.
  158. Web site: Will Batwoman Be Arrow's Brooding Heir Apparent? (Also, Is She Jewish?). Mitovich. Matt Webb. 2019-08-04. TVLine. en. 2019-12-06.
  159. Web site: 2021-10-28. This New Disney Series Has a Spot-on Bat Mitzvah Episode. 2021-10-29. Kveller. en.
  160. https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/the-making-of-steven-spielberg-180981184/
  161. https://www.kveller.com/this-disney-series-just-released-one-of-the-best-bat-mitzvah-episodes-yet/