Available Formats
Imagining Palestine: Cultures of Exile and National Identity
By (Author) Tahrir Hamdi
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
I.B. Tauris
15th December 2022
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Literary studies: general
Middle Eastern history
Cultural studies
956.942
Hardback
288
Width 138mm, Height 216mm
All national identities are somewhat fluid, held together by collective beliefs and practices as much as official territory and borders. In the context of the Palestinians, whose national status in so many instances remains unresolved, the articulation and imagination of national identity is particularly urgent. This book explores the ways that Palestinian intellectuals, artists, activists and ordinary citizens imagine their homeland, examining the works of key Palestinian and other thinkers and writers such as Edward Said, Ghassan Kanafani, Naji Al Ali, Mahmoud Darwish, Mourid Barghouti, Radwa Ashour, Suheir Hammad, and Susan Abulhawa. Deploying decolonial and resistance concepts, such as Palestinian sumud, Tahrir Hamdi argues that the imaginative construction of Palestine is a key element in the Palestinians ongoing struggle. An interdisciplinary work drawing upon critical theory, postcolonial and decolonial studies and literary analysis, this book will be of interest to students and scholars of Palestine and Middle East studies and Arabic literature.
With elegant prose and insightful ideas, Tahrir Hamdi has written a theoretical work that will be of interest to students and scholars of Palestine and Middle East studies and Arabic literature. However, because she emphasizes that transformation of theory into action, her book belongs on the shelf of everyone who is participating in the solidarity movement, partly because she thoroughly explains what it means to act in solidarity but also because her prose counters defeatist attitudes with a blueprint for victory. * The Palestine Chronicle *
This book could only be written by Tahrir Hamdi, an esteemed literary scholar from a family rooted in Palestinian resistance politics. Hamdi here models Saids intransigent intellectual, demanding irresistibly that postcolonial studies reclaim its radical roots and, in accounting for Palestine, realign with decolonial politics. * Lindsey Moore, Lancaster University, UK *
Tahrir Hamdis perspicacious interrogation of works of major Palestinian literary figures and international solidarity poets, concretizes ideas of RETURN, as the Palestinian imaginary. RETURN presupposes the dismantling of Zionist institutions in the process of liberation to build a democratic Palestinian state. * Ibrahim Aoude, University of Hawaii-Manoa, Hawaii *
Tahrir Hamdi is Professor of Decolonial Studies at Arab Open University, Jordan. She is on the editorial board of several prestigious journals and has published widely on resistance literature.