Jewish and Nerdy

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

Jews are, perhaps, the originators of the modern Nerd stereotype. Why? Maybe their long, scholarly tradition, maybe their immigrant past (comparable to Asian and Nerdy and the Bollywood Nerd), maybe their overbearing Education Mamas, maybe for some other weird reason. But for whatever reason, you will rarely see a stupid Jew on TV (unless they're more of a Ditzy Genius or Genius Ditz).

Compare Asian and Nerdy and Bollywood Nerd, two other ethnic nerd stereotypes; and Hollywood Nerd for the general appearance. Contrast Matzo Fever and Black and Nerdy, which is an inversion of a more prevalent ethnic stereotype. Intelligence as a character trait may lead to instances of Ambiguously Jewish, thanks to this trope.

Examples of Jewish and Nerdy include:

Anime and Manga

Comic Books

  • Billy/Wiccan from Young Avengers. In a team where every member is some degree of Ascended Fanboy, he's still one of the biggest nerds, and goes from Ambiguously Jewish to canonically Jewish during The Children's Crusade.
  • Gert from Runaways
  • Kitty Pride from X-Men; in the comic she wears a Star of David necklace.

Film

Literature

  • Butters from The Dresden Files is also a total geek and mentions in Dead Beat that he is Jewish.
  • Everybody in The Chosen.
  • Simon Lewis from The Mortal Instruments.
  • The Spanish Jew in Tales of a Wayside Inn. But of course everybody in that one was, the book being a collection of narrative poems centered around the theme of a meeting at an Inn of the nineteenth century equivalent of a gamer fraternity.

Live Action TV

Theatre

  • Mark Cohen from Rent.

Video Games

  • The entire Emmerich family line from the Metal Gear series, but Otacon most of all.

Western Animation

  • South Park: Both Kyle and his cousin from New York, also named Kyle.
    • Keep in mind that Kyle Broflovski tries hard to avert this trope and detests his cousin being this stereotype in every way. He's very intelligent, but decidedly less nerdy than most versions of this trope.
  • Mort Goldman, his wife Muriel, and their son Neil from Family Guy all fit this trope to a T.
  • Snot from American Dad
  • Ron Stoppable from Kim Possible.
  • Sheldon Klutzberry from The Replacements.

Real Life