
New Books in Intellectual History 164 Maurice Samuels: Jewish Assimilation, Integration and the Dreyfus Affair (JP)
Feb 5, 2026
Maurice Samuels, historian and director of Yale’s antisemitism program, discusses French Jewish life and his new biography of Alfred Dreyfus. He traces Dreyfus’s trial and exile, the role of Zola and public intellectuals, and distinctions between assimilation and integration in France. The conversation also covers laïcité, Léon Blum’s rise, and how debates over French identity echo into modern politics.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
France Emancipated Jews Early
- France emancipated Jews during the Revolution, granting full civil rights by 1791 ahead of other European states.
- That early legal equality enabled Jews like Dreyfus to rise into high public positions like the army general staff.
Use Minorities To Test Universalism
- Use the Jewish emancipation case to test universalist principles in practice.
- Policymakers should treat small, distinct minorities as trial cases for broader universalist commitments.
Integration Versus Assimilation
- Samuels distinguishes integration from assimilation and rejects Hannah Arendt's claim about disappearing Jewish identity.
- He argues Dreyfus's family integrated while retaining Jewish practices and communal ties.












