Co-memory and melancholia Israelis memorialising the Palestinian Nakba

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Edition: Reprint
Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2014-07-31
Publisher(s): Manchester University Press
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Summary

The 1948 war that led to the creation of the State of Israel also resulted in the destruction of Palestinian society when some 80 per cent of the Palestinians who lived in the major part of Palestine upon which Israel was established became refugees. Israelis call the 1948 war their 'War of Independence' and the Palestinians their 'Nakba', or catastrophe. After many years of Nakba denial, land appropriation, political discrimination against the Palestinians within Israel and the denial of rights to Palestinian refugees, in recent years the Nakba is beginning to penetrate Israeli public discourse.

This book, available at last in paperback, explores the construction of collective memory in Israeli society, where the memory of the trauma of the Holocaust and of Israel's war dead competes with the memory claims of the dispossessed Palestinians. Taking an auto-ethnographic approach, Ronit Lentin makes a contribution to social memory studies through a critical evaluation of the co-memoration of the Palestinian Nakba by Israeli Jews.

Against a background of the Israeli resistance movement, Lentin's central argument is that co-memorating the Nakba by Israeli Jews is motivated by an unresolved melancholia about the disappearance of Palestine and the dispossession of the Palestinians, a melancholia that shifts mourning from the lost object to the grieving subject. Lentin theorises Nakba co-memory as a politics of resistance, counterpoising co-memorative practices by internally displaced Israeli Palestinians with Israeli Jewish discourses of the Palestinian right of return, and questions whether return narratives by Israeli Jews, courageous as they may seem, are ultimately about Israeli Jewish self-healing rather than justice for Palestine.

Author Biography

Ronit Lentin is Lecturer in Sociology and Director of the MPhil in Race, Ethnicity, Conflict at the department of Sociology, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Living in the Shadow
1. Memory Sites, Postmemory, Co-memory
2. Memory and Melancholia
3. The Fall of Haifa: Telling Autoethnographic Stories
4. The Road to Damascus
5. Historicising the Nakba: Contested Nakba Narratives as an Ongoing Process
6. Zochrot: Nakba Co-memory as Performance
Conclusion: Melancholia, Nakba Co-memory and the Politics of Return
References

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