The article focuses on the nature of the settler-colonial genocide in terms of its origins, and its epistemic conditions. It track the discursive trajectory that connects the genocide in Palestine to the Irish genocide during the 17th century. The article examines the centrality of the Gaza genocide to the settlercolonial project in Palestine, and its association with Anglo-saxon colonization. It analyzes the performativity of “the Call for colonization” that has accompanied the colonial campaigns both in Ireland during the 17th century and Palestine. It offers an elaborte analysis of the history of settler-colonization as it has officially started in Ireland during the reign of Oliver Cromwell during the 17th century. The article further analyzes the discursive structure of the settler-colonial paradigm and its roots in Anglo-Saxon settlercolonization. It explains the settler-colonial universal project in Palestine which presents Palestine as a Promised Land to the Western colonizer. It demonstrates Western investment in genocidal wars carried out against “the people of the land” in order to establish the New World. The article also sheds light on the interplay between racism, and expansive colonial ambitions as it identifies the constant variables between the colonial condition in Palestine and Ireland. Finally, the analysis relies on the political literary discourse attributed to the Puritan movement in the 17th century that had promoted the colonization of Palestine as a complementary project to the colonization of America.
Namouthaj al Ist'mar al Istitani wa Epistimologia al Ibadah fi Falastin
karkar, h
2024
Abstract
The article focuses on the nature of the settler-colonial genocide in terms of its origins, and its epistemic conditions. It track the discursive trajectory that connects the genocide in Palestine to the Irish genocide during the 17th century. The article examines the centrality of the Gaza genocide to the settlercolonial project in Palestine, and its association with Anglo-saxon colonization. It analyzes the performativity of “the Call for colonization” that has accompanied the colonial campaigns both in Ireland during the 17th century and Palestine. It offers an elaborte analysis of the history of settler-colonization as it has officially started in Ireland during the reign of Oliver Cromwell during the 17th century. The article further analyzes the discursive structure of the settler-colonial paradigm and its roots in Anglo-Saxon settlercolonization. It explains the settler-colonial universal project in Palestine which presents Palestine as a Promised Land to the Western colonizer. It demonstrates Western investment in genocidal wars carried out against “the people of the land” in order to establish the New World. The article also sheds light on the interplay between racism, and expansive colonial ambitions as it identifies the constant variables between the colonial condition in Palestine and Ireland. Finally, the analysis relies on the political literary discourse attributed to the Puritan movement in the 17th century that had promoted the colonization of Palestine as a complementary project to the colonization of America.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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