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A Shadow Over Palestine : The Imperial Life OF Race In America

عدد النسخ: 1 عدد النسخ المعارة : 0 عدد النسخ المتاحة للاعارة : 1
رقم التسجيلة 6075
نوع المادة book
ردمك 9780816694501
رقم الطلب

DS63.2.U5F39

المؤلف Feldman, Keith P

العنوان A Shadow Over Palestine : The Imperial Life OF Race In America
بيانات النشر Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2015.
الوصف المادي 314 P
المحتويات / النص

Prologue: James Baldwin in the Holy Land Introduction: Special Relationships 1. Specters of Genocide: Cold War Exceptions and the Contradictions of Liberalism 2. Black Power’s Palestine: Permanent War and the Global Freedom Struggle 3. Jewish Conversions: Color Blindness, Anti-Imperialism, and Jewish National Liberation 4. Arab American Awakening: Edward Said, Area Studies, and Palestine’s Contrapuntal Futures 5. Moving toward Home: Women of Color Feminisms and the Lebanon Conjuncture Epilogue: On Shadows Acknowledgments Notes Index

المستخلص

Upon signing the first U.S. arms agreement with Israel in 1962, John F. Kennedy assured Golda Meir that the United States had “a special relationship with Israel in the Middle East,” comparable only to that of the United States with Britain. After more than five decades such a statement might seem incontrovertible—and yet its meaning has been fiercely contested from the start. A Shadow over Palestine brings a new, deeply informed, and transnational perspective to the decades and the cultural forces that have shaped sharply differing ideas of Israel’s standing with the United States—right up to the violent divisions of today. Focusing on the period from 1960 to 1985, author Keith P. Feldman reveals the centrality of Israel and Palestine in postwar U.S. imperial culture. Some representations of the region were used to manufacture “commonsense” racial ideologies underwriting the conviction that liberal democracy must coexist with racialized conditions of segregation, border policing, poverty, and the repression of dissent. Others animated vital critiques of these conditions, often forging robust if historically obscured border-crossing alternatives. In this rich cultural history of the period, Feldman deftly analyzes how artists, intellectuals, and organizations—from the United Nations, the Black Panther Party, and the Association of Arab American University Graduates to James Baldwin, Daniel Patrick Moynihan, Edward Said, and June Jordan—linked the unfulfilled promise of liberal democracy in the United States with the perpetuation of settler democracy in Israel and the possibility of Palestine’s

المواضيع United States - Foreign relations - Middle East