Violence and Non-Violence across Time, History, Religion and Culture
Abstract
This paper aims at investigating the presence of the dichotomy of violence and non-violence in contemporary Palestinian political rhetoric and practice. To do so, I will explore the varied Palestinian discourses tracing from the contemporary back to the early twentieth century, where I will interrogate anti-colonials practice both in violent and non-violent modes. Throughout, I will map-out the different agencies and the fields of argumentation of each political entity, and its justifications as a group living under colonial conditions. This article consists of three parts: part I tackles the conceptual framework of the dichotomy of violence and non-violence; part II explores the historiography of the modes of violence and non-violence; and part III traces the controversy within Palestinian society over the topic at stake from the early 1900s until the present- Book chapter
- dichotomy of violence and non-violence in contemporary Palestinian political rhetoric and practice
- Palestine - Politics and government
- Nonviolence - Political aspects - Palestine
- Violence - Political aspects - Palestine
- Palestine question
- Passive resistance - Palestine
- Discourse, political - Palestine