Banging on the Walls of the Tank
Dispatches from Gaza
309 kr
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Produktinformation
- Utgivningsdatum2026-02-02
- Mått140 x 216 x 16 mm
- Vikt314 g
- FormatHäftad
- SpråkEngelska
- Antal sidor240
- FörlagBetween the Lines
- ISBN9781771136754
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Haidar Eid is an associate professor of postcolonial and postmodern literature at Al-Aqsa University in Gaza, Palestine and a research associate at the Centre for Asian Studies at the University of Pretoria, South Africa. He is a policy advisor with Al-Shabaka, the Palestinian Policy Network, on the advisory board of the Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel (PACBI), and a member of the Board of Directors of BADIL Resource Center for Palestinian Residency and Refugee Rights. He is the author of Worlding Postmodernism: Interpretive Possibilities of Critical Theory, Countering the Palestinian Nakba: One State for All, and Decolonizing the Palestinian Mind.
- PrologueForewordGaza 2009Twenty-Two DaysJanuary 22, 2009—Sharpeville 1960, Gaza 2009February 11, 2009—Culture of Resistance vs. DefeatNovember 19, 2009—From Gaza to Obama: An Open LetterJuly 27, 2010—The Enduring SiegeGaza 2012History Repeats ItselfNovember 20, 2012—Gaza 2012!May 28, 2013—Personal Reflections on the NakbaGaza 2014The World’s Biggest GraveyardFebruary 18, 2014—The Alternative Is BDS!July 12, 2014—Signposts on the Road to LiberationJuly 31, 2014—The Rape of GazaAugust 27, 2014—The Othering of GazaFebruary 12, 2015—On Gaza and Global RageApril 2, 2015—Israel: Mainstream Western Media’s Blind SpotApril 6, 2016—Palestinian Reflections on Israel’s Hysterical Attack on BDSJune 16, 2017—One Question Left in Gaza: Death by Massacre or Lack of Electricity?July 14, 2017—Gaza and the Failure of the National ProjectOctober 20, 2017—Pessoptimistic Reflections from Besieged GazaGaza 2018Land Day Massacre2018—Gaza in a World Without WallsApril 5, 2018—What Next for Gaza After Israel’s Land Day Massacre?April 12, 2018—Standing Up to Apartheid: Contextualizing the Great March of ReturnMay 14, 2018—On the Seventieth Anniversary of the Nakba: Reflections of a Palestinian RefugeeMay 16, 2018—Why I Marched on May 14 in Gaza near the Israeli FenceJune 14, 2018—It Is Time to Levy Sanctions Against IsraelJuly 22, 2018—Israel Has Finally Come Out as an Ethno-Religious StateJuly 24, 2018—Back to the Future: The Great March of ReturnAugust 3, 2018—Israel’s Policies in Gaza Are GenocidalOctober 12, 2018—Fragmented Thoughts from the Eastern Fence of the Gaza Open-Air PrisonNovember 9, 2018—What Gaza WantsMay 6, 2019—Gaza Has Made Its Choice: It Will Continue to ResistNovember 20, 2019—The Only Remaining Hope in Gaza Is Knowing This Nightmare Can Be Brought to an EndJune 20, 2020—What Needs to Be DoneGaza 2021Wedha Street MassacreMay 16, 2021—Israel’s Wehda Street Massacre Shows It Seeks to Annihilate Us. We Won’t Let ItMay 27, 2021—An Apartheid Déjà VuDecember 10, 2021—The Construction of Israel’s Gaza Concentration Camp Is CompleteNovember 21, 2022—Reflections from Gaza After Israel’s ElectionsGaza 2023GenocideOctober 10, 2023—Our Warsaw Uprising MomentOctober 15, 2023—From Gaza We Ask You to Stand Up Against Genocide!October 30, 2023—“Demise of Official Arab Solidarity with Palestine”November 27, 2023—A Ceasefire in a Time of GenocideDecember 3, 2023—Leaving GazaDecember 9, 2023—Why Does America Hate Us?December 30, 2023—On the Gaza “Shoah” and the “Banality of Evil”January 12, 2024—From a Palestinian in Gaza, Thank You South Africa!January 26, 2024—ICJ Israel Decision: A New World Order in the MakingMay 1, 2024—The Genocide in Gaza Will Also Be the End of IsraelJune 9, 2024—My NuseiratJune 28, 2024—War on Gaza: The World Has Abandoned Us. What Can We Do?July 13, 2024—Now the Anemone Flowers Will Decorate His GraveThe One Year Anniversary of October 7: Personal ReflectionsEpilogueAcknowledgementsNotes
“Urgent, poignant, and erudite. Haidar Eid provides a much-needed analysis on how the genocide in Gaza did not start in 2023 and why Palestinians continue to bang on the walls of their imprisonment to affirm their humanity and their inalienable rights to freedom, equality, and return. Drawing on the example of South Africa, among others, Eid’s collection of essays make the strongest case for the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions campaign, international solidarity, and why the only way forward is a single democratic secular state between the river and the sea.”– Leila Farsakh, professor, University of Massachusetts Boston; editor of Rethinking Statehood in Palestine“In his dispatches from Gaza, Haidar Eid transforms Ghassan Kanafani’s question,“Why didn’t you bang on the walls of the tank?!” into a defiant cry: “We are banging on the walls of the tank!” For almost a century, Palestinians have never stopped knocking, and now, as Gaza’s ongoing genocide unfolds in real time before the world, the moral responsibility is no longer theirs to cry out but on humanity to listen.”– Abdul-Rahim Al-Shaikh, Palestinian poet and critic“This book offers an authentic and powerful Palestinian perspective on the killing fields of Gaza through an impressive fusion of historical analysis intertwined with moving personal anecdotes. In Banging on the Walls of the Tank, the people of Gaza appear as they really are: resilient and incredibly courageous in the face of a genocidal campaign against them. It is clear from this moving collection that one cannot wipe out Gaza as one would not be able to expunge Palestine as a whole as an idea, a nation, and a country. This is a must-read for anyone who wants to comprehend fully what it means to live in the biggest prison on earth, constantly in danger of annihilation.”– Ilan Pappe, author of The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine“This book brings us back to ourselves, humbled, enraged, and reminded of why Gaza is all of Palestine at once, and the centre of the world. For those of us who have watched in bewilderment the silence of the world through year after year of starvation by siege in Gaza, and war after war, Haidar Eid brings all the memories back with Banging on the Walls of the Tank. For those just tuning in, it is all that you need to understand what brought us here and to move us to the liberated future we yearn for. Listen to this insurgent voice of Gaza, to its fiery depth and pained defiance. Gaza can teach us all that is worth knowing. How to be free. How to be human.”– Dr. Jamila J. Ghaddar, assistant professor, Department of Media Studies, University of Amsterdam“Haidar Eid’s essays from inside the Israeli siege and wars on Gaza in the twenty-first century are a journey alongside Palestine’s enduring writers for freedom. The book’s title is taken from Ghassan Kanafani’s iconic story of the three Palestinian refugees who suffocated unheard in a truck, Mahmoud Darwish’s love poem, Silence for Gaza opens the book, and Eid’s life’s writing is steeped in Edward Said’s work. This is a book to discover Gaza today.”– Victoria Brittain, journalist and author