AnyBook4Less.com
Find the Best Price on the Web
Order from a Major Online Bookstore
Developed by Fintix
Home  |  Store List  |  FAQ  |  Contact Us  |  
 
Ultimate Book Price Comparison Engine
Save Your Time And Money

Palestinian Identity

Please fill out form in order to compare prices
Title: Palestinian Identity
by Rashid Khalidi
ISBN: 0-231-10515-0
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Pub. Date: 15 October, 1998
Format: Paperback
Volumes: 1
List Price(USD): $19.50
Your Country
Currency
Delivery
Include Used Books
Are you a club member of: Barnes and Noble
Books A Million Chapters.Indigo.ca

Average Customer Rating: 3.75 (8 reviews)

Customer Reviews

Rating: 5
Summary: The creation of Palestinians
Comment: The Palestinian Identity was created by the resistance to Israel. This is the most interesting revelation that comes from this study. Before Israel the Palestinians were a group of Bedouins, Druze, immigrants, Nouvo riche families(Nashashibis) and effendis(Husaynis). Palestine had been an Ottoman backwater. In the beginning it was grafted onto Jordan. But today's Palestinians don't think of themselves as Jordanian. This is an irony since in 1948 it was not the Israel that invaded Palestinian lands but rather the Egyptians and Jordanians that 'occupied' Palestine from 1948-1967. In a sense the true identity of Palestine came about only after 1967 in the opposition to being government by Dhimmis or non-Muslims. It was at this point that the Palestinians, who had no real identity, suddenly found themselves, in opposition. Arafat, a minor character, gained fame among the refugees and the rest is history. Now the Palestine 'identity' has tried to graft itself onto the Israeli-Arabs, especially the Bedouins and Druze who support Israel because they were suppressed by the 'Palestinians' and their fellow Arabs by being denied land. This is an ironic identity, almost as amazing as the Zionist creation of a 'New Jew' identity in the 1930s. If anything this book is a testament to how history can be invented, and how people who had no idea they belonged to a political unit 60 years ago suddenly feel like 'brothers' due to their shared experiences. An extraordinary account.

Seth J. Frantzman

Rating: 1
Summary: Propaganda
Comment: Bla bla bla. This is full of propaganda. It misses the main fact that there is no such thing as "Palestinian" identity. It is a made up name, which isn't even Arab, but taken from the Romans who came up with that name.

It is nothing but propaganda to destroy Israel. It's funny they finally "remembered" their "identity" right after the 1967 War.

They are nothing but Arabs who have over 20 countries to go to, Jews have only one.

Oh, and another thing, if you care just about the "West Bank" and Gaza why is it that when you had it between 1948 and 1967, there was no move for you to establish a state, and you had eastern Jerusalem too? And why was the PLO established in 1964, if "Palestine" was in your hands at that very year? What was it aiming to "liberate"?

The fact is when you mean "end of occupation" you mean end of Israel.

But you will never suceed. The truth is on Israel's side.

Rating: 2
Summary: Slanted History
Comment: Rashid Khalidi's book Palestinian Identity: The Construction of Modern National Consciousness attempts to surmise the modern history of Palestinian identity. The fomented Palestinian identity as seen through its development over the last 120 years or so is a vast and difficult undertaking. Khalidi tackles this question with a plethora of footnotes and references, but not as convincingly as it could be. Through a large array of references Khalidi is able to create a distinct Palestinian narrative that creates parameters for the evolution of Palestinian identity.

The idea of a national identity takes its foundation in a number of ways, but the least of which, Khalidi wants to attribute to some sort of Romantic European identity. Khalidi wants to paint the Palestinian narrative as a amalgamation of outside influences over the course of 120 years, and a common memory, tradition, custom, and feeling as evidenced in their collective past and reproduced in print media. Khalidi argues that the constructed national identity of Palestine is based on a number of factors, resulting in a shared "national consciousness" as Anderson would call it.

The introduction and first chapter of the book thoroughly outline just how important Palestinian identity has become and how it has not only been shaped by print capitalism, but that its constant revolution is a result of the modern Zionist/Palestine dynamic. In this dynamic the Palestinian is simply regarded as the other, and his/her subsequent identity is a response at best, but more accurately designed and shaped by Israeli discourse. "The fierce conflict between Palestinian and Zionist narratives which developed at an early stage in the history of both is among the reasons why Palestinian identity is so poorly understood (6)." Khalidi contends that the multi-layered Palestinian identity with all its factors is too complex to understand in light of the conflict. The Palestinian identity is a result of not only their relationship with the Israelis, but with the Arab nation as a whole, the Ottoman Empire, and the influence of the three primary Western monotheistic religions.

The biggest shortcoming in defining Palestinian identity on the national scene is a result of these contending and competing factions that overlap to create the Palestinian identity. The Palestinian identity has been quantified as a result, or in opposition, of the primary identities that exist in the Middle East (the Arab, Ottoman and Israeli identities and religious identities). The Palestinian identity has existed as a comparison to be made with these primary Middle East identities. The international community has come to embrace the Jewish names and ideas that surround Israel and Jerusalem. The Palestinian and Arab entities that exist in these same spatial areas are most often ignored because the Western Zionists have the ability to create the one-dimensional framework that is the "complex modern reality (15)" of the region.

Khalidi continues on this path of demonstrating the difficulty in conveying a shared "imagined" Palestinian identity. The foremost difficulty came at the hands of the Zionists, who already had a shared collective identity and the political clout of Europe. The Palestinians had to not only assert a national identity, they had to compete with the colonial minded Europeans and already "imagined community" of Zionists, therefore having their national identity relegated to a role of "other;" in juxtaposition to these two primary identities where Palestinian identity simply seemed like a response. These other national identities were not only establishing themselves as legitimate airs to Palestine, but were stultifying the attempt at Palestinian national consciousness. An important added element of Palestinian nationalism as identified by Khalidi is that the identity was not simply a response, the Palestinians reality was complex and shifting, but rooted in Palestinian patriotism as a result of history and Jerusalem, prior to the encroachment of the Zionist and European Colonial powers.

In addition to the encroaching nationalist entities the lack of internal structure made "imagining" a Palestinian community all the more difficult. As Palestine existed, in the Ottoman Empire, before the European Zionist enterprise of the late 1800s the Palestinian identity was laden with complex notions and only seemed to be united by Jerusalem and shari'a (Muslim law). The infringing Zionists created an added element, a response for Palestinian identity. Which is best illustrated through the treatment of Palestinian identity in early twentieth century literature where, "the society is being treated as an object rather than a subject of history (92)." The documentation that does exist in response to the Zionist enterprise shows a common thread of disapproval not only from the elites, but from the peasants as well. The land that was purchased by Zionists for Zionists, most of which was sold by absentee landlords that were not Palestinians, caused the locals (fellahin) that worked the land to exercise resistance and battle for their right to labor the land-which the Ottoman empire did not uphold. The question of Palestinian identity at this point took on added dimension. They were Arabs (elites and workers) in opposition to Zionists, and with the Ottoman Empire's approval of the land sales, they became anti-Ottoman government, therefore shedding that aspect of their identity. The Arab newspapers in Transjordan were instrumental in this building of an anti-Zionist base. As illustrative of Anderson this shared conveyed fear of Zionists as disseminated through newspapers created a shared sense of consciousness and knowledge to link the Palestinian people, yet not as distinct from the Arab community at large.

Similar Books:

Title: The Origins of Arab Nationalism
by Rashid Khalidi, Lisa Anderson, Muhammad Muslih, Reeva S. Simon
ISBN: 0231074352
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Pub. Date: 15 September, 1993
List Price(USD): $23.00
Title: Resurrecting Empire: Western Footprints and America's Perilous Path in the Middle East
by Rashid Khalidi
ISBN: 0807002348
Publisher: Beacon Press
Pub. Date: 15 May, 2004
List Price(USD): $23.00
Title: Recovered Roots: Collective Memory & the Making of Israeli National Tradition
by Yael Zerubavel
ISBN: 0226981584
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Pub. Date: August, 1995
List Price(USD): $21.00
Title: The Question of Palestine
by Edward W. Said
ISBN: 0679739882
Publisher: Vintage
Pub. Date: 07 April, 1992
List Price(USD): $14.95
Title: The Palestinian People : A History
by Baruch Kimmerling, Joel S. Migdal
ISBN: 0674011295
Publisher: Harvard Univ Pr
Pub. Date: March, 2003
List Price(USD): $17.95

Thank you for visiting www.AnyBook4Less.com and enjoy your savings!

Copyright� 2001-2021 Send your comments

Powered by Apache