A Political Theory for the Jewish People

A Political Theory for the Jewish People

A Political Theory for the Jewish People

A Political Theory for the Jewish People

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Overview

Chaim Gans's A Political Theory for the Jewish People examines the two dominant interpretations of Zionism, contrasts them with post-Zionist alternatives, and develops a third model.

Proprietary Zionism, Gans argues, is the version that is most popular among the Israeli Jewish public. It conceives of the land of Israel/historic Palestine as the property of the Jewish people. It also conceives of the entire Jewish people as belonging to Israel. Hierarchical Zionism is common among Israel's educated elites and interprets the Jewish right to self-determination as a right to hegemony within the Israeli state. It remains silent on the relationship between Israeli and non-Israeli Jews. Post-Zionist approaches, conversely, critique the rationale for the continued existence of the state of Israel as a Jewish state.

Gans disagrees with these approaches, and in their stead advocates egalitarian Zionism, which is based on an egalitarian interpretation of the right to national self-determination. As such, it interprets the historical link between the Jews and the land of Israel in terms of identity rather than property. Ultimately, the book argues that egalitarian Zionism is superior to its rivals both in the authenticity of its relationship to Jewish history and in its implications for denizens of Israel and Jews around the world.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9798874708580
Publisher: HighBridge Company
Publication date: 03/26/2024
Product dimensions: 5.30(w) x 7.50(h) x (d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Chaim Gans is Professor of Law at Tel Aviv University and author of A Just Zionism (Oxford UP) and The Limits of Nationalism (Cambridge UP)

Table of Contents

Table of contents
1. Zionisms and Post-Zionisms
1.1 A Variety of Approaches to Zionism
1.2 The Post-Zionist Challenge
1.3 The Narrative versus Its Interpretations
2. The Facts of the Zionist Narrative
2.1 Was There a Protagonist?
2.2 The Protagonist, Its Age, and Its Nature
2.3 The Protagonist's Adventures
3. The Morality of the Zionist Narrative: Three Zionisms
3.1 Not one Zionism but Three
3.2 Proprietary Zionism
3.3 Hierarchical Zionism
3.4 Egalitarian Zionism
4. Three Post-Zionisms
4.1 Between Hegemony and Post-Zionism
4.2 Contesting Zionism's Historical Project
4.3 Civic Post-Zionism
4.4 Post-Colonial Post-Zionism
4.5 Neo-Diasporic Post-Zionism
5. Egalitarian Zionism
5.1 Egalitarian Zionism and its Rivals
5.2 Zionist Consistency and Zionist Historiography
5.3 Zionisms, Post-Zionisms and Peace and Stability in Israel/Palestine
6. Jewish Nationalism, Israel, and World Jewry
6.1 World Jewry: Exile or Diaspora?
6.2 Proprietary Zionism: The Negation of Exile and the Denial of Diaspora
6.3 Post-Zionism: Denial of Exile and of Diaspora
6.4 Egalitarian Zionism: From the Negation of Exile to the Affirmation of the Diaspora
Afterword
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