Full Description
Explores how exceptional conditions surrounding the state of Israel—its suffering of existential insecurity—predisposes its citizenry to the virtue of moral attentiveness.
Paying "moral attention" to the world has been exhorted philosophically by the likes of Emmanuel Levinas, Simone Weil, and Iris Murdoch. This entails attending to the true nature of being, to the individuality of life—its sublime particularity—and transcending a habitude of cultural convention and a self-centered consciousness. Discerning reality in this way would further entail an ethical engagement with the Other: discerning the practice of a true goodness. Exceptional Israel aims to understand Zionism as an expression of such moral attentiveness, exploring Zionism historically, ethnographically, critically, and personally. Author Nigel Rapport argues that the abjection of Jewishness through the millennia—a suffering that includes the state of Israel (up to and including October 2023), a state whose existence has never been assured—causes Israeli Jewishness and moral attentiveness to be linked to an exceptional degree.
Contents
List of Illustrations
Foreword
Ronald Stade
Preface and Acknowledgements
Introductory
1. Exceptional Israel, historical 'miracle'
Part I. Moral Attentiveness
2. Iris Murdoch, the ethics of attention and the truth of the real
3. The artistic journey of Felix Nussbaum: From bourgeois to witness
Part II. Zionism in History
4. George Eliot's Daniel Deronda, the Balfour Declaration, and the founding of the State of Israel
5. Ronald Storrs, Edward Said, and the anti-Zionist chargesheet
Part III. Zionism in the State of Israel
6. Moral Exceptionalism: Israel's 'human politics of humanity'
7. Perspectives on an Anthropology of Israel
8. In the Aftermath of 7 October 2023
Afterthoughts
9. Israel as Hurt-Geography
10. Reviewing Exceptional Israel with Ronald Stade
References
Index



