Settler colonialism: an introduction
In: FireWorks
6 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: FireWorks
In: Journal of Palestine studies, Band 52, Heft 3, S. 23-45
ISSN: 1533-8614
World Affairs Online
In: Middle East critique, Band 28, Heft 3, S. 289-305
ISSN: 1943-6157
In: Historical materialism: research in critical marxist theory, Band 26, Heft 2, S. 149-177
ISSN: 1569-206X
AbstractThis paper explores contemporary Jewish identity-formation and the centrality of official Holocaust memory and Zionism – understood as the ongoing settler-colonial project aiming at the formation and maintenance of a Jewish-exclusivist state in Palestine – to this process. It argues that identity politics within the Jewish community are based on an understanding of identity, which assumes it to be static and individual. In doing so, this political approach reproduces the essentialisation of Jewish communities under the banner of Zionism and official state history. The paper aims to show how this process of identification between Judaism, official Holocaust memory and Zionism has been a state-led process, rooted in the historical development of antisemitism and European colonialism. In order to do so, it builds on a critique of classical Marxist analyses of the Jewish question. It finally proposes a more fluid approach to identity, which understands it as socially constructed, contested, and subject to political contestation.
In: International socialism: journal for socialist theory/ Socialist Workers Party, Heft 135, S. 115-136
ISSN: 0020-8736
In: Historical materialism: research in critical marxist theory, Band 32, Heft 1, S. 35-57
ISSN: 1569-206X
Abstract
Antisemitism is an increasingly prevalent aspect of public life in the West, both as a consequence of the growth of the far right across the board and through its mobilisation against Palestinian liberation and Palestine solidarity activism. While synagogues are targeted and far-right politicians revive ideas of Jewish global power, it is the left, Muslims, and Palestinians that are continuously constructed as the source of the current rise in hatred and violence against Jews. If historically the Marxist tradition engaged actively with the so-called Jewish question, in recent decades the subject has receded from focus. This shift took place as other forms of racism – directed at Muslims, Black populations, or migrants – became the basis for reactionary politics in the West. This article argues that while some of the assumptions that underwrote classical Marxist texts on the issue have been found wanting – perhaps most notably the inevitable (or desirable) character of the trend towards assimilation – they remain important starting points for making sense of our present, both by their method and their political commitment to liberation.