- ホーム
- > 洋書
- > 英文書
- > History / World
Full Description
Using Palestine as a case study, Recognition Politics in Settler Colonial States shows how recognition politics operate to legitimize long-standing colonial power structures.
In existing scholarship, recognition has been seen as an asset coveted by indigenous communities. This book forwards a new, theoretically ground-breaking perspective. Emile Badarin shows that in colonial contexts, settlers use recognition to legitimize and normalize the dispossession and elimination of Indigenous people. More than this, settler-colonial states themselves actively pursue recognition, employing it as a means to further the elimination of the indigenous societies they seek to replace. In making the case, the book critically examines the Euromodern categories of race, racism and racial hierarchies and draws new conclusions about the interplay between colonialism, racism and Zionism. Central to this analysis is how anti-Zionism has been strategically equated with anti-Semitism, and effectively used as a tool for the advancement of both settler-colonialism in Palestine and Israel's recognition on the international stage. The book delves into indigenous normative resistance against colonial recognition politics through the lens of the Palestinian practice of ?umud (steadfastness), extracting its philosophy of liberation as a pathway towards a decolonial future for all in Palestine and beyond.
Contents
Preface, with Acknowledgements
List of Abbreviations
Introduction
1 On the Coloniality of Recognition
2 Recognition Between the Divine and the Colonial Mandate to Displace, Eliminate and Replace
3 Colonialism, Racism and Zionism
4 Ensnare the Recognition
5 The Theodicy of the Anti-Zionism/Anti-Semitism Equivalency
6 Normative Sumud and the Struggle for Re-Existence
Conclusion
Endnotes
Index
-
- 洋書電子書籍
- Surveying the Skies…
-
- 洋書電子書籍
- ブラックホールの宇宙物理学の最前線
-
- 洋書電子書籍
- Vital Pulp Treatment
-
- 洋書電子書籍
- The Belly Fat Cure#…



