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仇外:義和團、種族屠殺、英國脫歐、川普當選,仇外情結的歷史

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429 pages, Kindle Edition

Published June 5, 2025

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About the author

George Makari

4 books38 followers
George Makari is a professor of psychiatry at Weill Cornell Medical College. The author of the acclaimed history Revolution in Mind: The Creation of Psychoanalysis and Soul Machine: The Invention of the Modern Mind, he lives in New York City.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 36 reviews
Profile Image for 8stitches 9lives.
2,853 reviews1,725 followers
August 23, 2021
Of Fear and Strangers is a startling work of historical sleuthing and synthesis which reveals the forgotten histories of xenophobia—and what they mean for us today. Psychiatrist and psychoanalyst George Makari, the head of the department of history of psychiatry at Cornell who is also a historian, has written a timely new book Of Fear and Strangers: A History of Xenophobia. By 2016 when it was impossible not to notice an international resurgence of xenophobia. What had happened? Looking for clues he started out in search of the idea’s origins. To his astonishment, he discovered an unfolding series of never-told stories. He discovered that while the fear and hatred of strangers may be ancient, the notion of a dangerous bias called "xenophobia" arose not that long ago. Coined by late-nineteenth-century doctors and political commentators and popularized by an eccentric stenographer, xenophobia emerged as a popular cultural concept alongside Western nationalism, colonialism, mass migration, and genocide.

Makari chronicles the concept’s rise, from its popularization and perverse misuse to its spread as an ethical principle in the wake of the Holocaust, and then on to its sudden reappearance in the twenty-first century. He investigates xenophobia’s evolution through writers like Joseph Conrad, Albert Camus and Richard Wright, and innovators like Walter Lippmann, Sigmund Freud, Jean-Paul Sartre, Simone de Beauvoir and Frantz Fanon. Weaving together history, philosophy and psychology, Makari also offers insights into related ideas such as the conditioned response, the stereotype, projection, the authoritarian personality, the other, and institutional bias. Makari offers a unifying paradigm for comprehending more clearly how xenophobia, other irrational anxieties and contests over identity sweep through cultures and lead to the dangerous divisions so prevalent today. A fascinating, informative and eminently readable work of nonfiction. Written in elegant prose, this is a timely and comprehensive investigation of one of the issues blighting our lives. Highly recommended.
Profile Image for Emiliya Bozhilova.
1,926 reviews386 followers
August 12, 2024
Разхвърляна и хаотична. Важна тема като ксенофобията е подета като обект на неудачни писателски импровизации. Резултатът е хаос, който има по-скоро качеството на някакъв вид интелектуален гъдел, но не и на сериозен и задълбочен обзор по темата. Книгата е досадна дори за привържениците на толерантността и отворения обществен код, а до истинските ксенофоби няма никакъв шанс да достигне. Време е автори, които имат да кажат нещо, просто да го кажат, вместо да демонстрират писателска нестандартност и екзотика. Истината е, че основните явления в живота, сред които е и ксенофобията, са до голяма степен стандартни (направо клишета!) и са разпознаваеми от половин дума или жест. И не търпят умишлено усложнени упражнения по търсене (и в случая ненамиране) на поднесена от крайно странен ъгъл гледна точка. Очаквах повече след силното встъпление за Ливан.
66 reviews3 followers
September 7, 2021
This book is interesting and well-written, though far more academic than I expected from its description. It will be interesting to students of linguistics, philosophy, psychology, and the fallout from the Cold War, among many other topics.

The book is divided into three parts. The first part (the strongest in my opinion, and the most fun to read) traces the history of the word xenophobia, from its first time appearing in print in various languages, to the changes in meaning over time, to its current usage. It does a good job of demonstrating how language can be used to shape thinking. An African country being invaded by England? Why, these Africans are all xenophobes by nature and fear all strangers, so we weapon-bearing colonizers, obviously just here on a friendly visit, have no choice but to be violent and destructive. It's not our fault -- they are the xenophobes. This part of the book is fascinating.

The second part of the book examines the psychology behind xenophobia. It delves into philosophy, psychiatry, psychology, anthropology, and pop culture (the origin of the modern usage of the word stereotype is particularly interesting). This part spends a lot of time on Sartre and Beauvoir, and discusses the evolution of anti-Semitism, especially in the context of World War II and the Holocaust. I'm glad I had some familiarity with many of the thinkers mentioned from studying philosophy in undergrad, which made this part a little easier to follow than it otherwise would have been.

The third part of the book is the shortest and, in my opinion, the least interesting. It offers an explanation for the current rise of xenophobia in the United States and Western Europe. I wouldn't characterize the book as offering solutions so much as paths for further study, which is valuable, but not what a lot of non-academic readers are looking for in contemporary books with a social justice focus.
Profile Image for Mehtap exotiquetv.
492 reviews261 followers
December 29, 2023
Woher kommt Xenophobie, die Angst vor „Fremden“ und warum durchleben unterschiedliche Gesellschaften in unterschiedlichen Ländern dieselben „Ängste“. Dafür schaut George Makari in die Entwicklung der Geschichte und wie sich politisch und strukturell Xenophobie etabliert hat. Dabei spielen selbstverständlich Genocide, Sprache und Medien eine wichtige Rolle.
Profile Image for Bulent2k2.
44 reviews3 followers
November 24, 2025
At least six stars!

"Don't talk to strangers" -- the pervasive imperative from adults to children -- is just one piece of evidence of how far we have gone into an irrational amount of fear of "the other." We have forgotten that to them, we are "the other." Yes, paranoia is normalized in our culture. Too many friends retort: "Just because it's paranoia, it doesn't mean that they aren't out to get you." Or, the know-it-all and ridiculous precepts from a poor and superficial understanding of biology and business: "only the paranoid survive." Isn't it clear that even the paranoid die? And worse, they seemingly suffer all the way to the "end.."

Makari, whose first two books, A Revolution in Mind, and The Soul Machine, are two of the best books of history and psychology (and philosophy and sociology, and...) I have read, and thoroughly enjoyed every page, did it again! In fact, he topped those wonderful, eye-opening and informative tomes with a shorter and surprisingly even more relevant book for our time.

Makari is not only a doctor of psychiatry, but clearly a superb historian and a highly talented author.

If you are observing and are concerned about all the anti-immigrant, protectionist, us-vs-them mentality, rising popularity of strongmen, and the manifest outcomes of all that: bloody wars in Europe, Middle East, and Africa, war on terror, mass-killings; or non-bloody kind: trade-wars, techno-wars, war on drugs... read this book. And talk about it to your neighbors and friends...

Makari has distilled a very impressive amount of history and other scholarly effort to understand and explain the nature and root causes of xenophobia from the ancients, written, but unnamed, in classics, to the newer forms in early days of the Columbian exchange and slavery and colonialism, all the way to the Great War, how it destroyed the fragile liberal order, and the Second World War, the Holocaust and the Cold War, its end which resulted in the ongoing troubles in ex-Yugoslavia and ex-Soviet countries.

The book is organized well in two larger parts, the history of xenophobia and the mental and social background of xenophobia. And, it then finishes with a shorter third part where Makari wraps it all up by showing how xenophobia can be modelled as a regress from stranger anxiety, to overt and covert forms of xenophobia. Las Casas, Diderot, Rousseau, Conrad, Camus, Sartre, de Beauvoir, Foucault, and many more who got alarmed, puzzled over, tried to inform and alert others, and attempted to crack this challenge are all presented in a very coherent and readable way.

It all ends, thank goodness, and thank you dear George Makari, with a positive and hopeful note, and an extensive one, on why and how we must, and we can, come out of this latest incarnation of a nightmare that has been with us since the early days of the Cognitive Revolution, who knows maybe about 50 thousand years ago, when we learned to talk to each other and said, "who the hell is that guy? Probably a foe. And, even if not, what does she want from me?"

We will learn to coexist, to get along, to love, let alone live and let live. Won't we?
Profile Image for Peter Baran.
875 reviews64 followers
September 21, 2021
Of Fear And Strangers is subtitled A History Of Xenophobia - which seems like a pretty timely subject and a very broad church indeed. It feels like a pretty universal axiom of human nature that we are predisposed to hate "the other", and as a psychologist I thought that this was the question Makari was going to test. But that isn't really what this book is about. Instead it is a history of the term Xenophobia, spending a lot of time seeing if the term ever really existed in the Greek, and then skipping through the ages until a modern coinage in the late Victorian period. Makari is right of course that once concepts have names they gain a different kind of power, but the introduction touts this survey as something that might be able to help dismantle xenophobia, when it really ends up allowing us to point out when the word is being used incorrectly (according the current agreed usage - as the word has slipped through a number of meanings in its time).

Luckily Makari is an engaging guide through the use and misuse of the word, and wears his scholarship lightly. But there is a sense as we look for crumbs in 19th century newspapers that he himself knows that the project has slightly slipped away from him. The concept of people hating outsiders is so large and slippery that it takes in diverse prejudices such as racism, jingoism and the concept of nation states. These get played through and there is much to me said for the work here on why xenophobia as a concept is generally ascribed to ones enemies before WW1 to show how unreasonable they are rather than a recognisable state for their own citizens. And certainly near the end he shows how a word previously used around warring nations gets played in the time of peace to prop up far right propaganda and anti-immigration rhetoric.

Of Fear And Strangers was an interesting read which promised a little more than it could deliver. The history of the term xenophobia is not the same as the history of xenophobia - but then the history of xenophobia is pretty much the warring parts of all human history. What Makari does well is at least show how the term has shifted through usage, and how the idea of broad xenophobia (rather than say specific Francophobia) has become so accepted as part of human nature that it is proudly trumped by people and even in some case politicians.
Profile Image for Ryan.
1,197 reviews
February 8, 2022
In Of Fear and Strangers: A History of Xenophobia, George Makari offers a history of xenophobia. I’m happy to recommend this work, but I will only focus on a few points of interest in this summary.

Etymology.

When we think of ‘xenophobia,’ we’re probably thinking of a 'fear' of 'strangers,' but Makari finds that the Greek roots of these words (other and fear) did not appear together in Ancient Greece. Instead, ‘xenia’ was more associated with guest right (think Polyphemous’s punishment for betraying guests or Ovid’s story of Zeus the traveller needing a place to stay as encouraging kindness to strangers).

Spain.

When Makari's history of Spain begins, it is a pluralistic nation of Christians, Jews, and Muslims. Under Ferdinand and Isabella, however, the country became obsessively Catholic. Spain relied on the Spanish Inquisition to search out and brutalize outsiders in an attempt to become more purely Catholic. In a tragically ironic turn, Spain would go on to finance Columbus’s trip to the New World, where he would brutalize the indigenous peoples he encountered. In this context, we also encounter Bartolome de Las Casas, an early voice identifying exactly how dangerous treating others as subhuman can be.

Imperial and Post Imperial Xenophobia

Curiously, in this era, Makari finds ‘xenophobia’ beginning to be used to describe colonized nations who object to imperial presence. Here, the colonized people of, to given one example, China’s Boxer Rebellion, are considered by Europeans closed minded and scared of strangers. By the end of the 19th century, however, the word begins to be applied to Europeans who worry about the colonized coming back along the trade routes to England and Europe.

Post World War II

In confronting the Holocaust, the West begins to recognize the dangers of xenophobia. Human beings are capable of being terrible to strangers, and now there were nuclear weapons, too. Makari cites a speech from Harry Truman in 1948 as calling on the academy to figure out why people are so capable of being cruel to strangers. Many theories begin to be explored. Behaviorists, for example, argue that exposure to strangers can reduce xenophobia, so they run experiments and encourage policies to encourage mixing. Michel Foucault would later argue that institutions are designed to create an other group in opposition to a “normal” group.

Makari’s conclusions

Makari argues that we often want to take several behaviours and group them all together under one label, and he suggests that this is what happened with “prejudice.” But these single word summaries are tricky to get right. Makari argues that there are at least three sub categories of xenophobia: "other anxiety," "overt xenophobia," and "covert xenophobia."
Other anxiety seems like an irrational fear of the unfamiliar that is well addressed by mixing with strangers. It's often suggested that inclusive representation of marginalized communities in sit-coms leads to broader acceptance, and perhaps that notion is well understood under this umbrella.
I understand the second term, overt xenophobia, as referring to bigotry. Makari argues that it is difficult to address overt xenophobia in people. He suggests that it might be best understood as a sort of identity/ group identity. Given that people can be notoriously unreasonable about how they identify themselves, if one’s identity is hateful, it’s very hard to unwind that hatred. I often think of Saslow's Rising Out of Hatred, which is about a young man who takes four years to figure out that white nationalism is wrong.
Covert xenophobia is closer to Foucault’s model—the ways in which groups are “othered” through subtle processes. Makari suggests that this form of xenophobia is best spotted in crises and outrages that prompt investigation into institutions.
Curiously, Makari concludes that he would still like to see some group label applied to these three processes and relies on Albert Memmi’s “heterophobia.”

Notes:
Profile Image for Kendall Concini.
Author 1 book7 followers
May 15, 2023
#readingchallenge2023 (my extra books!)

Though I’m rating a 1star, I should be marking it DNF, as I only read a handful of passages, within a few chapters, heavily skipping, more than ‘skimming’-

I really wanted to learn more about the topics presented- there was valuable analysis potential presented- but the author was so dry-so textbook.

Starting with a strength, as the promise was to explore psychological, cultural, and societal approaches to xenophobia, but the shifting paradigms throughout history were so convoluted in long digressions- even when there was a section that would catch my eye, I would start to lose interest merely sentences later. So monotone-
Profile Image for Steve.
1,197 reviews89 followers
October 24, 2021
Maybe inevitable when an author is both a psychiatrist and a historian, but this book went in too many directions for my taste, along with a terribly long digression about French existentialism. (Just a chapter or two, but why oh why?) But there is a lot of valuable information and analysis here, and some good history. A thread through the book is about the changing meaning of the word xenophobia, which despite its Greek components was never a term used in the classical times, although a similar word meaning “love of strangers” was found in ancient writings.
Profile Image for Gregory.
113 reviews7 followers
January 21, 2022
Brexit and the 2016 U.S. election jolted psychiatrist George Makari into writing this wide-ranging, highly readable investigation of xenophobia. It’s organized in three parts: first, tracing the elusive origins of the term itself; next a deep dive inside the xenophobic mind; followed by a concluding section summarizing major explanations and proposals for combating xenophobia today.

The author’s opening assumption was that the term must be nearly as old as homo sapiens, whose many migrations were likely to provoke innumerable bouts of “stranger anxiety” between unknown, potentially threatening newcomers and resident societies. For ancient Greeks, “xenos” meant both “stranger” and “guest.” If the latter, they could claim the host’s hospitality (“xenia”). But violators of xenia – think of the Cyclops’ rude habit of devouring visitors in The Odyssey -- were branded barbarians, fit only to be enslaved or killed, said Aristotle.

But Makari’s research led him to reject his first working assumption: far from originating in classical times, xenophobia only rose to common usage in the late 19th century, in two very different contexts. First, the new practitioners of psychiatry added it to a list of dozens of other phobias (agoraphobia, claustrophobia, etc.) in medical dictionaries. A second, far more frequent use was as a European justification for invasion and colonial subjugation across Africa and Asia. Cloaked in their self-image as “modernizers” and “civilizers,” apologists denounced any resistance by indigenous people (like China’s Boxer Rebellion, 1899-1901) as “irrational xenophobia.” Then, once some of the newly colonized victims tried to return the favor by traveling to Europe, the “immigrant boomerang” incited anti-immigrant xenophobia of the sort all too common today. A so-called “racial science” arose to claim that foreigners’ anti-imperialism was proof of their biological inferiority. The author sketches multiple brief biographies of key colonizers as well as anti-imperialists like Bartolome de Las Cases (son of a Columbus shipmate), Voltaire, Tolstoy, Mark Twain and Franz Boas, whose anthropological findings helped undermine racial science.

To explain xenophobia, Makari devotes the book’s next section to an ambitious survey of relevant 20th century research. Over five chapters he somehow covers everything from behavioral psychology, stereotype formation and Freudian projection, to the Frankfurt School’s findings linking authoritarian parenting to children’s racist attitudes. For all its many merits, his coverage of postwar Existentialism, feminism, deconstruction and Foucault seemed to me a rather rushed “aerial map” of too much terrain. The problem, in his defense, is that we lack “a unified theory to help us name, decode and defuse the different kinds of xenophobia.”

As a first step in that direction, he suggests that we clearly distinguish three main types:
First, “Other Anxiety” – the everyday uncertainty on meeting a stranger which, depending on one’s socialization, can set off biased conditioned reflexes; second, “Overt Xenophobia” – rigid stereotypical thinking that projects one’s own shame and self-hatred onto demonized individuals or groups; and last, “Covert Xenophobia” – uncritical acceptance of discriminatory biases built into institutions and laws. Makari holds out hope that at least two of these can still be changed. Other Anxiety among, for example, homogeneous rural populations, may be diminished by sensitivity training and more opportunities for interracial workplace and social interactions. Covert Xenophobia is vulnerable to sustained pressure for legal and institutional change by large and persistent social movements. Here the points to the recent surprising gains of the civil rights, feminist and LGBTQ movements.

By far the most difficult to change is Overt Xenophobia. Impervious to rational discussion, reeducation or shaming, its adherents swoon mindlessly, even suicidally before a charismatic leader. Makari suggests a long-run strategy of countering their rigid biases with consistent demands for “radical egalitarianism” and tolerance (except toward those undermining tolerance). Two out of three isn’t bad! And perhaps we can hope he’s right that, under mounting pressure for more global cooperation against climate change, nuclear proliferation and pandemics, progress against all forms of xenophobia is still possible.
Profile Image for Sw3.
816 reviews4 followers
December 21, 2025
Absolutely phenomenal. Fantastic introduction and overview of xenophobia. The second half of Part II was a bit of a challenge and it got a little too deep into philosophy for me. I wish Part III which covers the 80s to the 2010s was longer. I feel like there were more insights to glean on the EU and the current wave of nationalism.
Profile Image for Alexandra.
838 reviews138 followers
September 1, 2021
What an absolutely remarkable book. It's not quite what I was expecting - which was a history of, I guess, where xenophobia has occurred, and maybe it consequences. But more interestingly that that, this is a history of the very concept of xenophobia. It does use examples of historical xenophobia - of course it does; you can't discuss what the word means without showing what it has looked like. But it's more psychological and philosophical than I was expecting, as a way of getting to the guts of why humans can react so poorly towards strangers, and how we have tried to explain that to ourselves.

And the first thing I learned is that 'xenophobia' as a word is brand new. Like, end of the 19th century new. Makari goes through his whole journey of discovery about this - detailing what he read and what explanations he chased down - in what almost amounts to a thriller in terms of sudden clues popping up. This was the first hint that not only was this going to be fascinating information, but also that the style was going to keep me engaged and keep me ploughing through what otherwise might have been overwhelming, both intellectually and emotionally. This was also building on a very personal opening to the book: Makari outlines his own family's experience of being "xenos" - strangers - descended from Lebanese ancestors, living in America, experiencing the dismissal of "Arabs" and wondering about his family's place in the world. Being published in 2021, as well, and of course, the question of xenophobia and how "we" react to the "stranger" remains as tragically relevant today as it has been at any time in the past.

Part 1 explores "The Origins of Xenophobia" - where the word originates, how it was used to describe the so-called Boxer Rebellion in China - and therefore the 'mad' reaction of Chinese people to Westerners and all the 'enlightenment' they could bring. And then how the word was used in colonial contexts - xenophobia is a product of the inferior mind, because 'they' don't understand what 'we' (colonisers) are bringing, and they don't know any better than to be hostile! And then on through Conrad's Heart of Darkness, flipping that idea of xenophobia around and showing how colonisers might be the scared ones... and then on into discussion of immigration. Sadly, that connects really early on with Jewish migration, and then of course the book leads into the Holocaust.

Part 2, then, explores "Inside the Xenophobic Mind." I have neither philosophical nor psychological training, so this part both taught me many new things, and was also surprisingly approachable. Well, approachable in terms of understanding in general, although again confronting in some parts - like the experiments to train kids into having phobias to try and understand how such fears can develop... and also because some of the philosophical aspects definitely went over my head. So this section, too, made me think much more both about xenophobia as a concept but also about how different groups have approached the desire to understand it - external or internal reasons, love and projection and can we ever truly know someone else... and so on.

I would heartily recommend this to people who are interested in why humans act the way they do, for people seeking an understanding of the way the world is and has been; whether you're an historian or not, whether you've knowledge of psychology or not, Makari makes difficult concepts relatively straightforward to grasp. And he doesn't claim to be able to explain all of humanity, but the book does suggest a range of ways that we might try to think about ourselves, and our neighbours, and our leaders... and think about why we react the way we do. And that can only be a good thing, right? In fact, I think that as many people as possible should read this book, so that we can be much better at talking about these things, and be a little less defensive.
Profile Image for Maher Razouk.
786 reviews253 followers
January 3, 2023
أشار عالم الأحياء التطوري ستيفن جاي جولد إلى نقطة مهمة : ألا يفضل الانتقاء الطبيعي أولئك الذين اكتشفوا متى كان القتال ضروريًا ومتى لم يكن كذلك؟

الفِرق التي تجنبت الصراعات غير الضرورية ، على عكس تلك القبائل المعزولة التي اختبأت في أعماق الغابة ، لديها القدرة على بناء مجموعات متنوعة وقوية ، وهي حقيقة أدركها تشارلز داروين نفسه. كما أشار جاريد دايموند ، حدث تكيف ثقافي حاسم - تجرأ حتى الآن على تحديد تاريخه قبل 7500 عام - عندما تعلمت الفرق والقبائل "لأول مرة في التاريخ ، كيفية مواجهة الغرباء بانتظام دون قتلهم". من خلال إدارة الصراع مع الغرباء ، اندمجت القبائل الصغيرة في مجموعات سكانية أكبر ، قادرة على تحقيق فوائض غذائية سمحت بالتقسيم الطبقي والتقدم التكنولوجي.

في مثل هذه المجتمعات المعقدة ، قد يتنافس الأفراد ويبحثون عن الرقم واحد ، لكنهم أيضًا يتجاذبون أطراف الحديث مثل النحل العامل. إذا كنا مجبرين على القتال ، فنحن أيضًا مجبرون على ، حسنًا ... المغازلة. يلتقي البشر بالغرباء ، ويشكلون أزواجًا ، وعائلات ، وقبائل أكبر ، وأممًا جديدة. في هذه الهياكل الناشئة ، لا يكون كره الأجانب ميزة تطورية. في الواقع ، ربما يكون أكثر أنواع الكوارث زعزعة للاستقرار.
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George Makari
Of Fear And Strangers
Translated By #Maher_Razouk
2 reviews
January 6, 2025
If you are looking for a comprehensive history of the both psychological and historical history of fear of strangers this is an excellent book to consider. It covers the first usage of the word along with it's etymology. It dives into how it was used to subjugate colonized people during peak European imperialism and then how it was perpetrated by European societies when migrants immigrated to European nations. It also examines the psychological component with easy to follow psychological examples like Pavlov's dogs. Overall this is an important book because of the classic saying "those who do not learn history are doomed to repeat it". As we see a concerning rise of xenophobia worldwide along with far-right governments pushing anti-immigration reforms this book demonstrates hatred of the "other" will only cause societal demise. The only reason I gave this book three stars is that it is a little slow at times but the information overall is very informative.
173 reviews4 followers
December 31, 2021
Of Fear and Strangers starts great, with an interesting history of xenophobia through the ages. The author details just how horrible we can be to people who don't look or talk like us, citing examples from the 1400's through the Holocaust. There are several that I never learned about in history classes, filling in gaps. For this, it is worthwhile.

After the history, the author attempts to "get into the mind" of xenophobes, and this is where it veers off into the weeds. There may be attraction for other psychologists, but to this reviewer there was none. Further frustrating is that there are no suggestions for reducing or mitigating xenophobia, which is getting considerable traction in current times.

Profile Image for M Arteaga.
37 reviews
July 30, 2024
Given to read by the English Department at Fordham (from Anwita Ghosh and Prof Anne Hoffman) in late January, early February. The author, Makari, is from Lebanon and applies a "man of Jewish ancestry" lens throughout the book. Themes I liked were the historical anecdotes, the duality of immigrant vs patriot and how being the former in a new country leads people to prove themselves by being the latter, and the things that unite a society or a people are often the things that end up being negative (such as hate).
Profile Image for Cara Byrne.
3,864 reviews36 followers
August 15, 2022
As one of the winners of the 2022 Anisfield-Wolf Award for Non-fiction, I had the opportunity to read and unpack this book with a group of educators for a week in August 2022. While the writing is dense and Western European-centric, Makari provides a rich history of how white men have understood and used the term "xenophobia" over the last couple of centuries.
Profile Image for Madeline.
115 reviews
April 14, 2024
This is a good book. Definitely heavy and very academic. I had to be in the right frame of mind to read it, because if I wasn't I knew I would just start reading the words and not actually processing the information. Some interesting ideas put forward and interesting history lessons. Recommend if you're into history and/or political science and have done similar readings in college.
Profile Image for Zachary.
93 reviews
September 13, 2021
(I received an advanced copy of this book as part of a giveaway.) I thought this was an excellent book that would be of interest to anyone curious about how the term "xenophobia" and the present idea of xenophobia developed over a long period of time, going back to the Greeks and Spanish Conquistadors all the way to the present.

My biggest complaint with the book comes down to an editorial/publishing decision, rather than the contents of the book. Although there is a significant note section at the end of the book, there are no markings to indicate endnotes in the text, this makes it unnecessarily difficult to cross reference his ideas with the citations provided, I am always cautious of an academic book that doesn't have any little numbers directing me to sources.

I think this book would be of special interest to social science scholars broadly. I was impressed by the way the author told the story of xenophobia while tracing the developments in the surrounding academic fields. I hope future academics pick up on some of the threads the author left to better figure out how we can reverse the issues stemming from xenophobia in our society, and prevent the broad category of prejudices from tearing us apart further. From this book, I think that is likely a project that will be ongoing or reoccurring throughout human history.
252 reviews3 followers
June 26, 2025
Incredibly prescient, well researched and infinitely interesting, George Makari's Of Fear and Strangers takes the reader on a journey from the beginning of when the word xenophobia entered the lexicon, what it meant, how it changed and how it represents the cultural anxieties of the time.

What could have been a super heavy book actually wears its crown lightly. It is a vastly entertaining book that really digs into the people that either exasperated prejudice and pushed against it.

He also really digs into the beginning of the word as a combo of two greek words and explains how its meaning was very different thousands of years ago.

On top of that, Makrai adds his personal history as the son of immigrants who came to America yet constantly pined for their home in Lebanon, where Makari visited his relatives as a child every year until war ended that trip. Makari talks about desperately trying to Americanize and, like many children of immigrants lived two lives, one at home and the other out in the world.

I highly recommend this fascinating book. The "what can we do" section of the book is fairly generic except that, unlike many other tomes of this sort, Makari finds multiple reasons for our xenophobia, recognizes it as a complex combination of factors, which makes a solution a bit more difficult.
Profile Image for Michelle Arredondo.
501 reviews60 followers
February 15, 2022
Great cover and interesting content. I wanted a unique read diving into things that I feel I've grasped some knowledge on but also want totally new information to learn about. I know what I know and I want to know all the things I don't know.

Woah. Talk about complex and detailed. I was a bit intimidated after a few pages but very excited to get exactly what I asked for. Yes, as mentioned, it is complex but it's written so fantastically that when you get past being intimidated you discover that it's approachable. It's comprehensive but it's descriptive and I appreciated that. A topic very much on the front end of all things politics, religion, social, etc. I was intrigued that it details xenophobia throughout history and not just what is current. I assumed it was going to be more psychology-based but it instead is a record of accounts and some discussion on that.

Thanks to the good people of Goodreads and to W.W Norton & Company for my copy of this book won via giveaway. I received. I read. I reviewed this book honestly and voluntarily.
Profile Image for Michel Sabbagh.
172 reviews1 follower
September 26, 2021
Subject Appeal: 5/5.
Research Depth: 4/5.
Research Breadth: 4/5.
Narrative Flow: 4/5.

Verdict: 4/5. A hard-hitting wake-up call to the cosmopolitan need for loving the unknown and Other in times of uncertainty.
Profile Image for Luke Eure.
233 reviews1 follower
January 8, 2025
If you are reading a book and come across a paragraph that begins "I went to my shelves and pulled down the Compact Oxford English Dictionary.", you should close the book and congratulate yourself on a few unexpected hours of free time. Because that is a book you do not need to read.
Profile Image for Julie Bergley.
1,973 reviews5 followers
September 28, 2025
This was fascinating. I really learned a lot about not only the origins of the word xenophobia and the way it shows up in society. It was amazing. However it discusses very heavy topics, like where xenophobia leads. So keep that in mind before reading.
162 reviews1 follower
November 4, 2021
The only disappointment the lack of a plan for society to move beyond xenophobia.
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