Colonizing Self

Or, Home and Homelessness in Israel/Palestine

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Hagar Kotef: Colonizing Self (2020, Duke University Press)

304 pages

English language

Published 2020 by Duke University Press.

ISBN:
978-1-4780-1028-9
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A chapter-by-chapter summary of The Colonising Self

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Introduction: Home The aim of the book is to examine the 'cultural, political and theoretical apparatuses that enable people and nations to construct a home on the ruins of other people's home, to feel that they belong to spaces of expulsion, or to develop an attachment to sites which subsequently – or even consequently – are transformed into sites of violence' (p. 3). The premise is that the home is a key site of colonialism not only of colonialism but also nation-building, because of its position and meaning in liberal political theory. Namely, the oikos as opposed to the polis. In these accounts, straight from Aristotle, the public sphere is where everyone (citizens) are supposedly equal, whereas the home is where difference justifies domination (e.g. over women, children and slaves). In this way, domination is framed as non-political, making space for the political ideals of universalism (see p. 8). The …