The Spectral Palestinian: Presence before Politics
Autor John Randolph LeBlancen Limba Engleză Hardback – 16 apr 2026
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781666962147
ISBN-10: 1666962147
Pagini: 216
Ilustrații: n/a
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.5 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 1666962147
Pagini: 216
Ilustrații: n/a
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.5 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Cuprins
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1: Occupied Body, Occupied Mind: Transforming Vulnerability in Shehadeh's Occupation Diaries
Chapter 2: The Spectral Palestinian: Liminality and Politics in Darwish's In the Presence of Absence
Chapter 3: Collaboration, Resistance, and Implication in Sari Nusseibeh's What is a Palestinian State Worth?
Chapter 4: Joseph K. in the West Bank: Shehadeh's Palestinian 'Legal Narrative' as Kafkaesque Chain Novel
Chapter 5: Breaking the Mirror of Sovereignty in Darwish's In the Presence of Absence
Chapter 6: Tracing Our Steps: Shehadeh's Walks in a Disappearing Political Landscape
Conclusion
Bibliography
About the Author
Index
Introduction
Chapter 1: Occupied Body, Occupied Mind: Transforming Vulnerability in Shehadeh's Occupation Diaries
Chapter 2: The Spectral Palestinian: Liminality and Politics in Darwish's In the Presence of Absence
Chapter 3: Collaboration, Resistance, and Implication in Sari Nusseibeh's What is a Palestinian State Worth?
Chapter 4: Joseph K. in the West Bank: Shehadeh's Palestinian 'Legal Narrative' as Kafkaesque Chain Novel
Chapter 5: Breaking the Mirror of Sovereignty in Darwish's In the Presence of Absence
Chapter 6: Tracing Our Steps: Shehadeh's Walks in a Disappearing Political Landscape
Conclusion
Bibliography
About the Author
Index
Recenzii
Against a Zionist regime that shrinks Palestinian worldhood, The Spectral Palestinian foregrounds defiant Palestinian voices who poetically and materially refuse their containment and determination from without. Mobilizing Sari Nusseibeh, Mahmoud Darwish, and Raja Shehadeh in the struggle against settler erasure, this invaluable book shows clearly that Palestinians' hunger for liberation persists, despite or even because of multiple setbacks, failures, and disclosures of vulnerability. While Israel's genocidal project anxiously seeks to invisibilize the Palestinian by any means necessary, LeBlanc unearths in this figure's haunting non-being, its spectrality, a subversive reality that relentlessly frustrates and upends Zionist frames of intelligibility, calling for new and inventive ways of thinking the predicament of Palestinians politically.
The uncertain status of Palestinians as humans worthy of flourishing lives is a result of decades of being regarded as a people without a history, without claim to a home, without voice, and without a right to resist erasure. The importance of Randy LeBlanc's work lies in the space he creates for Palestinian thinkers, writers and activists to take control over the marginalized and spectral condition to which they have been relegated. LeBlanc's readings of Raja Shehadeh, Sari Nussibeh, and Mahmoud Darwish are careful, respectful, interesting, and evocative. Their words challenge the displacement and invisibility of Palestinians with courage. They demand a world where they and their families can be safe and free once conquest in the name of self-defense is exposed as illegitimate and genocidal. The Spectral Palestinian is an illuminating and timely work of political theory.
John Randolph LeBlanc's work utilizes a range of literature to question the efficacy, dexterity, and usefulness of our interdisciplinary categories in order to explore precarity, inhumanity, and to urge us to read from the viewpoint of the spectral"other." Such reading helps us to recognize our own vulnerabilities and to enter the logic of the counter-narrative, potentially, to create change. Fluent and wise, this book should upset our reliance on standard solutions to complex problems and place us in a cooperative attitude that LeBlanc opens in his conclusion: to put the concepts on the table and ask how we must attend to them so as not to render "others" spectral.
The uncertain status of Palestinians as humans worthy of flourishing lives is a result of decades of being regarded as a people without a history, without claim to a home, without voice, and without a right to resist erasure. The importance of Randy LeBlanc's work lies in the space he creates for Palestinian thinkers, writers and activists to take control over the marginalized and spectral condition to which they have been relegated. LeBlanc's readings of Raja Shehadeh, Sari Nussibeh, and Mahmoud Darwish are careful, respectful, interesting, and evocative. Their words challenge the displacement and invisibility of Palestinians with courage. They demand a world where they and their families can be safe and free once conquest in the name of self-defense is exposed as illegitimate and genocidal. The Spectral Palestinian is an illuminating and timely work of political theory.
John Randolph LeBlanc's work utilizes a range of literature to question the efficacy, dexterity, and usefulness of our interdisciplinary categories in order to explore precarity, inhumanity, and to urge us to read from the viewpoint of the spectral"other." Such reading helps us to recognize our own vulnerabilities and to enter the logic of the counter-narrative, potentially, to create change. Fluent and wise, this book should upset our reliance on standard solutions to complex problems and place us in a cooperative attitude that LeBlanc opens in his conclusion: to put the concepts on the table and ask how we must attend to them so as not to render "others" spectral.