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Heritage and the cultural struggle for Palestine

Part of the Stanford Studies in Middle Eastern and Islamic Societies and Cultures series
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In recent decades, Palestinian heritage organizations have launched numerous urban regeneration and museum projects across the West Bank in response to the enduring Israeli occupation.

These efforts to reclaim and assert Palestinian heritage differ significantly from the typical global cultural project: here it is people's cultural memory and living environment, rather than ancient history and archaeology, that take center stage.

It is local civil society and NGOs, not state actors, who are "doing" heritage.

In this context, Palestinian heritage has become not just a practice of resistance, but a resourceful mode of governing the Palestinian landscape. With this book, Chiara De Cesari examines these Palestinian heritage projects—notably the Hebron Rehabilitation Committee, Riwaq, and the Palestinian Museum—and the transnational actors, practices, and material sites they mobilize to create new institutions in the absence of a sovereign state.

Through their rehabilitation of Palestinian heritage, these organizations have halted the expansion of Israeli settlements.

They have also given Palestinians opportunities to rethink and transform state functions.

Heritage and the Cultural Struggle for Palestine reveals how the West Bank is home to creative experimentation, insurgent agencies, and resourceful attempts to reverse colonial violence—and a model of how things could be.

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Product Details
Stanford University Press
1503609383 / 9781503609389
Paperback / softback
24/09/2019
United States
English
288 pages.