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Israel-Palestine Conflict: Contested Histories [Hardback]

4.28/5 (140 ratings by Goodreads)
(Vanier College, Quebec, Canada)
  • Formāts: Hardback, 336 pages, height x width x depth: 236x163x34 mm, weight: 626 g
  • Sērija : Contesting the Past
  • Izdošanas datums: 14-Aug-2009
  • Izdevniecība: Wiley-Blackwell
  • ISBN-10: 1405175397
  • ISBN-13: 9781405175395
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
  • Hardback
  • Cena: 110,57 €
  • Grāmatu piegādes laiks ir 3-4 nedēļas, ja grāmata ir uz vietas izdevniecības noliktavā. Ja izdevējam nepieciešams publicēt jaunu tirāžu, grāmatas piegāde var aizkavēties.
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  • Pievienot vēlmju sarakstam
  • Formāts: Hardback, 336 pages, height x width x depth: 236x163x34 mm, weight: 626 g
  • Sērija : Contesting the Past
  • Izdošanas datums: 14-Aug-2009
  • Izdevniecība: Wiley-Blackwell
  • ISBN-10: 1405175397
  • ISBN-13: 9781405175395
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
The Israel-Palestine Conflict: Contested Histories provides non-specialist readers with an introduction and historical overview of the issues that have characterized and defined 130 years of the still unresolved Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
  • Provides a fresh attempt to break away from polemical approaches that have undermined academic discussion and political debates
  • Focuses on a series of core arguments that the author considers essentially unwinnable
  • Introduces readers to the major historiographical debates sparked by the dispute
  • Encourages readers to consider more useful ways of explaining and understanding the conflict, and to go beyond trying to prove who is ‘right’ and ‘wrong’

"This volume suggests a fresh and original interpretation to the history of the Arab Israeli conflict. Caplan juggles skillfully and even-handedly between the two narratives, reflecting the parties’ own views without embracing the cause of any party."
Joseph Nevo, University of Haifa

"An impressive and very valuable work. One could not ask for a better short history of the conflict. Caplan offers readers a study that is extremely well-informed, resolutely fair-minded, and filled with thoughtful insights."
Mark Tessler, University of Michigan

Recenzijas

"Caplan provides a brisk and balanced account of [ the history of the Israel-Palestine conflict]. But he also maneuvers deftly between and above the Arab and Zionist narratives and helpfully defines the main historiographical disputes that keep scholars arguingincluded loaded terminology like 'terrorism' and 'resistance.' [ His book] looks at the core arguments 'that seem to deadlock protagonists and historians alike,' explaining cogently why the conflict has not yet been resolvedand why it may never be." (Ian Black, Literary Hub, 2017)

"Several of the methodological and analytical chapters (i.e. those dealing with 'missed opportunities' and 'obstacles to a settlement') are insightful and very helpful. More important, the substantial core of his book demonstrates that through the layers of propaganda, advocacy and sheer hostility an honest, professional historian can still decipher the code of lsraeli Palestinian relations and convey it to his readers." (Bustan: The Middle East Book Review, 2011)

"This is the best book I have seen for use as a text for introductory course on the conflict. Instead of overwhelming students with names, dates, and events, it presents the most important concepts of each stage of the conflict, and connects them to the key issues in contention." (Professor Paul L. Scham, 2011)

"The Israel-Palestine Conflict: Contested Histories provides an impressive, balanced, and comprehensive one hundred thirty year history of the conflict. . . This is an original and important contribution to the study of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and I recommend the book wholeheartedly." (Review of Middle East Studies, 1 November 2010)

"Th[ e] focus on 'dueling narratives' is clearly applicable to the Israeli-Palestinian case, and is employed here with great skill. This is also a very self-reflective book, with as much attention given to arguments over interpretation and historiography as to the history itself. Within this framework, Caplan has provided us with one of the best executed overviews of the Israeli-Palestinian (or Arab-Israeli) conflict available. Perhaps the relativists are correct that perfect objectivity is impossible; nevertheless, Caplan has achieved a level of detachment that ought to be an object of emulation." (Israel Studies Forum, Fall 2010)

"A whopping 28-page bibliography and a chronology complete what is surely one of the most accessible, coherent, and balanced accounts available of this very contested history." (Foreign Affairs, January 2011)

"Neil Caplan's concise and excellent primer, The Israel-Palestine Conflict: Contested Histories places Israel's struggle with the Palestinians and the Arabs in perspective. Caplan, a professor of history at Concordia University in Montreal, analyzes the key issues with piercing insight." (The Canadian Jewish News, July 2010)

"The book may serve not only as an advanced introductory reading, but also as an authoritative overview of the literature and disputed issues of the conflict." (H-Soz-u-Kult, May 2010)

"Neil Caplan has devoted a lifetime to understanding, teaching, and writing prolifically about the origins and development of Arab-Jewish relations, and particularly aspects of Arab-Israeli negotiations dating back to before World War I. More than half a dozen scholarly monographs later, in writing this summative analysis, he has again maintained a characteristically meticulous devotion to sources. Almost unique in our professional specialty, he enthusiastically presents an unbiased presentation of viewpoints. It will have wide appeal for followers of the conflict, and can be used as an introductory primer for one's first exposure to the conflict's century-long twists and turns." (Middle East Journal, Spring 2010)

"Indentifies major stumbling blocks ensnaring the potential for peace and eloquently outlines the various intellectual and moral identities of various scholarly approaches. Most valuable is its reconsideration of how history is understood and expressed by scholars, activists, and the victims and perpetrators of this tired and bloody conflict." (Ottawa Jewish Bulletin, March 2010)

"In this age of polarization it is refreshing to read a work on this subject which eschews partisanship, refuses to champion one people over another, and recognizes that both make plausible claims to the same land. (Outlook, November 2009)

List of Maps
x
Preface xi
Note on Sources xiii
Part I Introduction
1(38)
Problems in Defining the Conflict
3(14)
What's in a Name?
4(1)
Loaded Terminology
5(5)
Dates and Periodization
10(1)
An Ongoing Conflict
10(1)
Tractable or Intractable?
10(2)
Conflict Resolution, or Conflict Management?
12(1)
The ``Other'' Arab-Israeli Conflict
12(1)
Advocacy and Censure
13(4)
Defining the Conflict, Neverthless
17(22)
Who Are the Conflicting Parties?
17(4)
What Are the Main Issues in Contention among the Parties to the Conflict?
21(8)
Competing Narratives: Right versus Right, Victim versus Victim
29(1)
Ways of Visualizing the Conflict
30(2)
Analogies and Parables
32(1)
The Conflict in Comparative Perspective
33(6)
Part II Histories in Contention
39(180)
Background to 1917: Origins of Conflict
41(15)
Ancient Ties and Historical Memories
41(2)
Early Encounters: 1880s-1914
43(3)
An Unseen Question?
46(1)
Colonialism and Nationalism
46(4)
Victims versus Victims
50(6)
Arabs and Jews under the British Mandate: Entrenching Positions, 1917-1928
56(23)
Wartime Commitments: Plaestine as the ``Much Too Promised Land''?
57(2)
Britain's ``Dual Obligation''
59(3)
The Mandate and Its Implementation: Cycle of Protests and Inquiry Commissions
62(3)
Clashes and Confrontations during the Early Years of the Mandate
65(1)
Zionist Responses to Palestinian-Arab Opposition
66(3)
``Making the Desert Bloom''
69(3)
The Deceptive Lull
72(7)
Collapse of the Mandate: Rebellion, Partition, White Paper, 1929-1939
79(22)
Radicalization of Palestinian Politics
79(3)
General Strike and Rebellion. 1936
82(1)
Turning Point: The (Peel) Royal Commission
83(4)
Retreat from Partition
87(2)
The Resort to Force: Violence, Terrorism, and National Struggles
89(12)
Shoah, Atzma'ut, Nakba: 1939-1949
101(30)
The Holocaust and Jewish Immigration to Palestine
101(5)
The Anglo-American Committee of Inquiry
106(1)
UNSCOP and the Creation of Israel
107(4)
War: Atzma'ut and Nakba
111(8)
Nakba and Shoah: Victims versus Victims. Once Again
119(12)
Israel and the Arab States, 1949-1973
131(29)
The Palestinian Issue after 1949
132(2)
From Armistice to Non-Peace
134(3)
Low-Intensity Border Warfare. 1949-1956
137(3)
From War to War, I (1949-1956)
140(3)
From War to War, II (1957-1967)
143(5)
From War to War, III (1967-1973)
148(12)
Back to the Core: Israel and the Palestinians
160(18)
Primal Fears, New Militancy
160(2)
The Re-emergence of the Palestinian National Movement after 1967
162(6)
The Palestine Question at the United Nations
168(10)
From Camp David to the West Bank to Lebanon
178(17)
Camp David and the Israel-Egypt Peace Process
178(3)
The West Bank and Gaza ater Camp David
181(4)
The Lebanon War, 1982
185(2)
Righteous Victimhood in the 1980s
187(8)
From Boycott to Mutual Recognition, 1982-2008
195(24)
Peace Plans and Planting Seeds
195(2)
The First Intifada and the Gulf War, 1987-1991
197(5)
Madrid and Oslo: A New Peace Process
202(4)
Camp David Revisited: Intifada Redux
206(13)
Part III Towards a More Useful Discussion of the Arab-Israeli Conflict
219(49)
Writing about the Conflict
221(31)
On the Shortcomings of ``Myths versus Facts''
222(2)
The Role of the Academic
224(2)
Scholars and Public Intellectuals
226(6)
Israel's ``New Historians''
232(1)
Missed Opportunities
233(8)
Trends in Palestinian and Israeli Historiography
241(11)
Confronting the Obstacles
252(16)
Issues in Dispute: Drawing upon the Past, Imagining the Future
252(3)
Righteous Victimhood
255(4)
Obstacles to Understanding the Conflict
259(3)
Six Explanations
262(6)
Chronology 268(12)
Bibliography 280(29)
Index 309
A native of Montreal, Neil Caplan received his Ph.D. from the London School of Economics and Political Science. Since retiring from teaching in 2008 he has held an affiliate position in the History Department of Concordia University and is Scholar-in-Residence at Vanier College, both in Montreal. He is the author of numerous scholarly articles and eight books, including Futile Diplomacy, a 4-volume documentary history of Zionist-Arab and Arab-Israeli negotiations, 1913-1956 and (with Laura Z. Eisenberg) Negotiating Arab-Israeli Peace: Patterns, Problems, Possibilities. His most recent publication is My Struggle for Peace: The Diary of Moshe Sharett, 1953-1956, co-edited with Yaakov Sharett.