International recognition of Palestinian trauma, including the foundational trauma of al-nakba (‘the catastrophe’) of 1948, is the cornerstone of the collective Palestinian struggle for self-determination. Hegemonic Israeli versions of history, however, continue to obstruct Palestinian counter-representational efforts to make their trauma visible. This is not only about who has the loudest voice; that is to say, the most powerful (political and economic) backing. Nor is the problem confined to the progressive disappearance of Palestinian land or viable habitus, producing a near impossible present and future. The close fit that has obtained between trauma studies and recuperated Holocaust histories, and the use of trauma discourse to sedimen...
Drawing on postcolonial and settler-colonial studies, this article accounts for the settler-colonial...
Since the 1948 Palestine Nakba and creation of the Palestinian refugee problem the Nakba has been a ...
"1948" is a key concept in Israeli identity discourse. A signifier of the violent clashes that took ...
International recognition of Palestinian trauma, including the foundational trauma of al-nakba (‘the...
In the context of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the tragedies of the Holocaust and the Nakba (Ar...
The memories carried by the Palestinian people can be understood in two forms. First, there are the ...
The 1948 Palestine War is known to Israelis as 'the War of Independence'. But for Palestinians, the ...
In 2009 Palestinians commemorate the 60th anniversary of the Nakba - the most traumatic catastrophe ...
The Middle East conflict between the Palestinians and the Israelis is a deadly battle between two vi...
This year Palestinians commemorate the 60th anniversary of the Nakba – the most traumatic catastroph...
Since 1947, more than 700,000 Palestinians have been displaced from their homes in what is now Israe...
Historians too often construct frameworks and methodologies which obfuscate social, economic and pol...
By Sarah El Bulbeisi Since 1947, more than 700,000 Palestinians have been displaced from their homes...
Beginning in 1948, Israeli paramilitary forces began violently displacing Palestinian Arabs from Pal...
Situated in the post-Oslo era, this work constitutes a parallel analysis of the collective transmiss...
Drawing on postcolonial and settler-colonial studies, this article accounts for the settler-colonial...
Since the 1948 Palestine Nakba and creation of the Palestinian refugee problem the Nakba has been a ...
"1948" is a key concept in Israeli identity discourse. A signifier of the violent clashes that took ...
International recognition of Palestinian trauma, including the foundational trauma of al-nakba (‘the...
In the context of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the tragedies of the Holocaust and the Nakba (Ar...
The memories carried by the Palestinian people can be understood in two forms. First, there are the ...
The 1948 Palestine War is known to Israelis as 'the War of Independence'. But for Palestinians, the ...
In 2009 Palestinians commemorate the 60th anniversary of the Nakba - the most traumatic catastrophe ...
The Middle East conflict between the Palestinians and the Israelis is a deadly battle between two vi...
This year Palestinians commemorate the 60th anniversary of the Nakba – the most traumatic catastroph...
Since 1947, more than 700,000 Palestinians have been displaced from their homes in what is now Israe...
Historians too often construct frameworks and methodologies which obfuscate social, economic and pol...
By Sarah El Bulbeisi Since 1947, more than 700,000 Palestinians have been displaced from their homes...
Beginning in 1948, Israeli paramilitary forces began violently displacing Palestinian Arabs from Pal...
Situated in the post-Oslo era, this work constitutes a parallel analysis of the collective transmiss...
Drawing on postcolonial and settler-colonial studies, this article accounts for the settler-colonial...
Since the 1948 Palestine Nakba and creation of the Palestinian refugee problem the Nakba has been a ...
"1948" is a key concept in Israeli identity discourse. A signifier of the violent clashes that took ...