In this volume a distinguished group of international scholars
draws from history, folklore, political anthropology,
historiography, and cultural criticism to reexamine critical issues
surrounding the birth of Israel. The authors explore such issues as
the transition form yishuv to state, early state policy toward the
Arab minority, the origins of the Palestinian refugee problem, the
conflict over myths and symbols in the early state, early attitude
toward Holocaust victims and survivors, Arab historiography of the
1948 war, Israel-Diaspora relations, and the shaping of Israeli
foreign policy.
The contributors to the book include: Myron J. Aronoff (Rutgers
University), Uri Bialer (Hebrew University of Jerusalem), Neil
Caplan (Vanier College, Montreal), Benny Morris(Hebrew Univeristy
of Jerusalem), Don Peretz (State University of New York,
Binghamton), Dina Porat (Tel Aviv University), Jehuda Reinharz
(Brandeis University), Elie Rekhess (Tel Aviv University), Avraham
Sela(Hebrew University of Jerusalem), Anton Shammas(University of
Michigan), Laurence J. Silberstein (Lehigh University), Kennethy
STein (Emory University), Yael Zerubavel(University of
Pennsylvania), and Ronald W. Zweig (Tel Aviv University).
General
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