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Anti-Palestinianism

An urgent and revelatory primer on the widespread racism against Palestinians in the Western world – where it comes from and whose interests it serves

Over the course of the twentieth century, the Western imperial powers which had spent a hundred years pursuing violent colonial projects around the globe were gradually forced to withdraw, conceding to the overwhelming demand for independence from occupied peoples in Asia, Africa, the Caribbean, the Middle East. But one country was excluded from this historic sea change.


As the colonial apparatus was being dismantled around the world, the colonisation of Palestine was just beginning – moving against the current of history – sponsored and orchestrated by British and American governments. And as the twentieth century wore on, these same Western powers steadily fostered a deep culture of denial and repression against Palestinians both at home and abroad. They purged representations of Palestine from public life; they decried anyone advocating for the basic human rights of Palestinians as a hateful anti-Semite; they denied the very existence of the Palestinian people.


This constellation of violently prejudiced narratives is what Saree and Ussama Makdisi identify as anti-Palestinianism.

In Anti-Palestinianism, the authors set out the stark reality of how Palestine became the last moral carve-out of the post-colonial West. And they show how the pursuit of anti-Palestinian policy has shattered freedom of expression for everyone in the West, our governments choosing to protect a distant project of colonial apartheid over the civil rights of their own people. Clear-eyed and powerfully persuasive, this is an essential primer for anyone seeking to make sense of the ongoing horrors in Gaza and the West Bank, as well as the disturbing politics of denial and suppression emerging in response across our own democracy.

About Saree Makdisi

Saree Makdisi is the Chair of the English Department at UCLA and a scholar of Palestine, colonial history, and its afterlives. He is the author of Palestine Inside Out (Norton, 2008), which counted Alice Walker, Desmond Tutu, and Howard Zinn among its many supporters, and Tolerance is a Wasteland (UCP, 2022), which Judith Butler called “a beacon of light.” He wrote the introduction for the recent reissue of Edward Said’s The Question of Palestine, which he presented at Southbank Center in a much-watched speech last fall. He writes frequently for the Los Angeles Times, the Washington Post, The Guardian, n+1, and the London Review of Books. His essay “No Human Being Can Exist” was n+1’s most-read piece of 2023.
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Details
  • Imprint: Hamish Hamilton
  • ISBN: 9780241831212
  • Length: 208 pages
  • Price: £14.99
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