Memories of Revolt: The 1936–1939 Rebellion and the Palestinian National Past

Front Cover
University of Arkansas Press, Jul 1, 2003 - History - 301 pages
“This wonderful monograph treats a subject that resonates with anyone who studies the Palestinian-Israeli conflict and particularly Palestinian nationalism: that how Palestinian history is remembered and constructed is as meaningful to our understanding of the current struggle as arriving as some sort of ‘complete empirical understanding’ of its history. Swedenburg . . . studies how a major anti-colonial insurrection, the 1936–38 strike and revolt in Palestine [against the British], is remembered in Palestinian nationalist historiography, western and Israeli ‘official’ historical discourse, and Palestinian popular memory. Using primarily oral history interviews, supplemented by archival material and national monuments, he presents multiple, complex, contradictory, and alternative interpretations of historical events. . . . The book is thematically divided into explorations of Palestinian nationalist symbols, stereotypes, and myths; Israeli national monuments that simultaneously act as historical ‘injunctions against forgetting’ Jewish history and efforts to ‘marginalize, vilify, and obliterate’ the Arab history of Palestine; Palestine subaltern memories as resistance to official narratives, including unpopular and controversial recollections of collaboration and assassination; and finally, how the recodification and revival of memories of the revolt informed the Palestinian intifada that erupted in 1987.” —MESA Bulletin
 

Contents

1 Popular Memory and the Palestinian National Past
1
2 Scenes of Erasure
38
3 Popular Nationalism
76
4 Memory as Resistance
107
Accommodation and Collaboration
138
IntifadaThawra
171
Fabulous Images
202
Afterword 2003
211
Notes
217
Bibliography
241
Index
259
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

Popular passages

Page xiii - States : the American Council of Learned Societies, the Social Science Research Council, and the National Research Council. The...
Page xxviii - Nietzschean than realist or hermeneutic, all constructed truths are made possible by powerful "lies" of exclusion and rhetoric. Even the best ethnographic texts — serious, true fictions — are systems, or economies, of truth. Power and history work through them, in ways their authors cannot fully control.

About the author (2003)

Ted Swedenburg is an associate professor of anthropology at the University of Arkansas. With Smadar Lavie, he is the co-editor of Displacement, Diaspora, and Geographies of Identity (Duke, 1996).

Bibliographic information