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OverviewThis book explores the history of the Israeli Socialist Organization - Matzpen (compass) - that splintered off from the Communist Party of Israel in 1962. After the Six Day War of June 1967, Matzpen shook Israeli society, calling for a withdrawal from the recently occupied territories, and placing itself outside the national consensus. Even before the war, the group emphasised the colonial dimension of the conflict between Israeli Jews and Palestinian Arabs, which was irresolvable within the paradigm of the nation-state. Matzpen instead advocated for Israel's de-Zionisation and a socialist revolution in the Middle East in order to both restore the rights of Palestinian Arabs and guarantee the existence of Israeli Jews as a new Hebrew nation. However, in the era after Auschwitz, when the Jewish world stood in almost unanimous solidarity with the Jewish state, Matzpen's radical perspective was at odds with the history and memory of the Holocaust. Against this backdrop, this study places Matzpen's political stance in its historical context and sheds new light on the political culture of Israel. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Lutz Fiedler , Jake SchneiderPublisher: Edinburgh University Press Imprint: Edinburgh University Press ISBN: 9781474451161ISBN 10: 1474451160 Pages: 408 Publication Date: 30 September 2020 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviews"In this brilliant and deeply-researched book, Lutz Fiedler writes with empathy and critical engagement a new history of Israeli dissent, showing how the small political group of Matzpen provided--and is still providing--an alternative to Israeli Jewish existence in Israel and Palestine. This story from the past has forceful present-day resonance!-- ""Alon Confino, University of Massachusetts, Amherst"" Lutz Fiedler's highly informative book about the far Left group, Matzpen, is a welcome addition to the recording of both Jewish and Israeli history. [...] This is an absorbing book, based on intensive research, because it is more a history of the international Jewish far Left and its origins rather than Matzpen itself. It is also a work that connects the far Left in Israel with its counterparts in the UK and elsewhere in Europe.--Colin Shindler ""Fathom Journal, 2021"" Matzpen: A History of Israeli Dissidence makes novel and important contributions to the topic. With a mastery of the archive and a powerful feel for the history of ideas, Fiedler locates Matzpen within the field of the global New Left of the 1960s and '70s, drawing connections not only to Europe but to the Arab world and the decolonizing countries of Africa.--Matan Kaminer, Hebrew University of Jerusalem ""The Tel Aviv Review of Books"" Matzpen: A History of Israeli Dissidence makes novel and important contributions to the topic. With a mastery of the archive and a powerful feel for the history of ideas, Fiedler locates Matzpen within the field of the global New Left of the 1960s and '70s, drawing connections not only to Europe but to the Arab world and the decolonizing countries of Africa.--Matan Kaminer, Hebrew University of Jerusalem ""The Tel Aviv Review of Books"" In his excellent new book, Matzpen: A History of Israeli Dissidence, Lutz Fiedler, of the Selma Stern Center for Jewish Studies Berlin-Brandenburg, offers the most comprehensive history now available in English of the anti-Zionist left in Israel.--Shaul Magid, Dartmouth College ""Tablet (magazine), May 2021""" Author InformationResearch Associate at the Selma Stern Center for Jewish Studies, Humboldt University, Berlin. Jake Schneider is a US-born, Berlin-based translator and the editor in chief of the literary journal SAND, established in 2009. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |