Summary: | Most media coverage and research on the experience of Palestinians focuses on those living in the West Bank or the Gaza Strip, while the sizable number of Palestinians living within Israel rarely garners significant academic or media attention. Offering a rich and multidimensional portrait of the lived realities of Palestinians within the state of Israel, Displaced at Home gathers a group of Palestinian women scholars who present unflinching critiques of the complexities and challenges inherent in the lives of this understudied but important minority within Israel. The essays here engage topics ranging from internal refugees and historical memory to women's sexuality and the resistant possibilities of hip-hop culture among young Palestinians. Unique in the collection is sustained attention to gender concerns, which have tended to be subordinated to questions of nationalism, statehood, and citizenship. The first collection of its kind in English, Displaced at Home presents on-the-ground examples of the changing political, social, and economic conditions of Palestinians in Israel, and examines how global, national, and local concerns intersect and shape their daily lives. "Informative, insightful, and thought-provoking."--Mary N. Layoun, author of Wedded to the Land? Gender, Boundaries, and Nationalism in Crisis. "This groundbreaking book helps to fill a huge gap in research on Palestinians in Israel."--Amal Amirch, author of The Factory Girl and the Seamstress: Imagining Gender and Class in Nineteenth-Century American Fiction --Book Jacket.
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