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Unsettling Gaza - Secular Liberalism, Radical Religion, and the Israeli Settlement Project (Hardcover)
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Unsettling Gaza - Secular Liberalism, Radical Religion, and the Israeli Settlement Project (Hardcover)
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The terms Israel, Palestine, and conflict conjure up a set of
images of struggles between two peoples over territory and
sovereignty in the heart of the Middle East. However, there are
conficts within that confict that contribute to the seemingly
endless violence in the region. This book examines one of those
conflicts, between Jewish Israelis, focusing on the case of
right-wing religious settlers in Israeli-occupied territories, and
the liberal left-wing public that vehemently opposes the settlers
and their project. This is a conflict that has taken on central
importance in the current political climate as the settlers are
seen by many in the region as a threat to both democracy and peace
with the Palestinians. At the same time, those religiously
motivated settlers question the limits of liberal democracy and
deem liberal Israeli practices as threatening to the very future of
the State of Israel. In Israel the socio-religious-political scene
tends to be depicted in sets of binary oppositions: right/left,
religious/secular, in favor/opposed to settlement in post-1967
occupied territories. Arguing that these binaries are not the most
useful conceptualization, Dalsheim employs recent fieldwork to
place the two sets of apparently incommensurable discourses and
practices in a single frame. During the year preceding the Israeli
withdrawal from the Gaza Strip, or "disengagement," she carried out
ethnographic fieldwork among Israeli settlers on both sides of the
Green Line in that region. She argues that this conflict between
Israeli settlers arises from the suppression of sameness, rather
than difference, focusing on the commonalities among settlers in
the Gaza Strip and liberal Israelis (often from kibbutz
communities) in the Western Negev across the Green Line. By
shedding light on the roots of this intractable conflict, Dalsheim
makes it possible to examine lesser known socio-religious-political
positions and constellations of identity that challenge the limits
of what appear to be the currently available options for
Israel/Palestine.
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