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List of contents
Acknowledgments
Preface
1. Fragmentation and Isolation in Nablus
2. Geographical Fragmentation
3. Political Fragmentation.
4. Social Fragmentation
5. Development, Divisions, and Debt
6. From Agricultural Resilience to Food Insecurity
7. Storytelling and Making Sense of the Everyday
8. Negotiating Space and Imagery in Disoriented Landscapes
9. Conclusion
Notes to Chapters
Bibliography
About the author
Joshua Rickard is Associate Professor in the Center for International Education at Kumamoto University, Japan
Summary
This book examines processes of fragmentation that have altered the social dynamics of Palestinian society since the second intifada. With a specific focus on the city of Nablus and its outer laying areas, the book details the extraordinarily personal experience of isolation - namely the physical division of communities through long-term military siege, and the ways that communities have adapted to get by despite frequently changing restrictions.
Joshua Rickard shows various forms of isolation and social fragmentation, combined with the uncertainty of everyday life, that have come to characterise the existential experience of being Palestinian. More relevant than how the conditions of fragmentation have occurred is what isolation and uncertainty mean to communities that are severed from those surrounding them. Finally, this book examines the possibility for a reformation of social organisation that transcends traditional political discourses which can be seen emerging from Palestinian communities.
Foreword
Illustrates the systematic social fragmentation and isolation of Palestinian society based on the experience of communities that have experienced long-term military siege
Additional text
This is a must-read book for those interested in settler colonial studies, colonial studies and post colonial studies. The book details in a smooth and comprehensive way the impact of the intertwining of colonialism and pseudo-national entity that led to the fragmentation and weakening of the Palestinian national identity after the Oslo Accords of 1993.