Erasing Palestine: Free Speech and Palestinian Freedom

Author(s): Rebecca Ruth Gould

Politics | Palestine & Israel

Having been accused of antisemitism for writing an account of the injustices she witnessed in Palestine, Rebecca Ruth Gould embarks on a journey to understand how the fight against antisemitism has been weaponized not to defend civil rights, but to deny them.


In this exploration, she comes to a broader understanding of how censorship threatens the intersectional movements against racism and prejudice in all its forms, including antisemitism and anti-Palestinian racism. Gould warns of the consequences if academic freedom is not protected and highlights the importance of free speech for the politics of liberation.

Review: A detailed, in-depth study that gets to the heart of one of the contemporary world's most contentious issues. A bold and expert expose of the real reasons behind the West's current antisemitism industry: the silencing of Palestinians and their erasure from history. -- Ghada Karmi, author of In Search of Fatima and Return
Never have we been more in need of hearing the heroic voices of Palestinian activists and their supporters, still unwaveringly resisting the ongoing Israeli seizure of their land and daily control over their lives and movement. In this meticulously researched, moving and persuasive book, Rebecca Ruth Gould surveys the ever-mounting silencing of any support for justice for Palestinians with specious accusations of anti-Semitism against any and all of those joining the struggle to end Israel's brutal occupation, including against the author herself. -- Lynne Segal, author of Lean on Me
What if an anti-racism is oppressive and threatens to wipe out a nation? Rebecca Gould's fine analysis patiently and lucidly shows how a currently prevalent understanding of antisemitism is threatening to do just this. First by misdescribing antisemitism; then by its use as a weapon to silence dissent; and finally to erase the idea of a suffering Palestinian people with a claim to statehood. It's a bold series of claims but not simply ideas as its based on painful personal experience. -- Tariq Modood, University of Bristol
In her book Erasing Palestine Rebecca Ruth Gould offers a sharp and nuanced critique of the ways in which fighting anti semitism turns out to be a way to suppress freedom of speech. While speaking out of her own personal experience Gould brings a new perspective to the debate around defining antisemitism by focusing on its implications for the free speech of Palestinians and pro Palestinian voices. This book is a must read for those interested in understanding the ways in which human rights, anti semitism, and issues of Palestine-Israel are entangled together. -- Raef Zreik, fellow, Schell Center for Human Rights, Yale Law School
This fine and courageous book takes seriously both the brutal 'erasure' of Palestine by the policies of a Zionist state and the phenomenon of antisemitism. At the heart of its theoretical claims is a refusal to approach antisemitism by seeking to define it, but rather to elaborate the social and economic conditions in which it grew. Definitions can be and have been manipulated to declare all criticisms of the Israeli state to be presumptively antisemitic, but a socio-economic genealogical approach, by contrast, allows us to confirm the most fundamental of human values--free speech-which is indispensable in the struggle to mobilize against the erasure of Palestine. It is a complex and ambitious argument and a deeply thoughtful work. -- Akeel Bilgrami, Sidney Morgenbesser Professor of Philosophy, Columbia University
In this deeply personal and politically engaged book, Gould makes a challenging, provocative and radical case for promoting uncompromising free speech, an essential prerequisite in the quest for Palestinian freedom. Academically rooted in literature, language and law, she takes us on a fascinating intellectual journey, which includes experiencing cancel culture, commuting between home in the occupied Palestinian territories and an academic post in Jerusalem, discovering her suppressed Jewish heritage, and reaching a materialist understanding of antisemitism. -- Antony Lerman, author of Whatever Happened to Antisemitism?
In ERASING PALESTINE, Rebecca Gould embarks on a fascinating personal and intellectual journey. On the one hand, this is undoubtedly the most comprehensive and in-depth critical analysis of the IHRA's definition of antisemitism and its impact on "erasing Palestine" and on curbing free speech . But on the other hand, Gould offers a self-reflective critical observation of herself and an alternative brilliant approach to the problem of antisemitism based on Jewish Marxist theorists. This materialist analysis is needed today more than ever. -- Amos Goldberg, fellow, Research Institute of Contemporary Jewry, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
This book brilliantly discusses how the physical erasure of Palestine passes through the suppression of the Palestinian narrative. It explains that freedom of expression and academic freedom remain paramount tools to enable solidarity with the quest for freedom and justice for the Palestinian people, especially in the United Kingdom and the United States where there is a coordinated effort to censor the voices of advocates for Palestinian human rights. -- Giovanni Fassina, Director of the European Legal Support Center
Part political-philosophy and part eloquent polemic, Rebecca Ruth Gould's book is a wide-ranging exploration of how today's social-justice battles-for Palestinian liberation, against antisemitism, against racism-are hindered by university bureaucrats as much as politicized liberal ideals. -- Lori Allen, author of A History of False Hope: Investigative Commissions in Palestine


 


 


Author Biography: Rebecca Ruth Gould is the author of Writers and Rebels (2016), Cityscapes (2019), The Routledge Handbook of Translation and Activism (2020), Beautiful English (2021), and The Persian Prison Poem (2021). She teaches at the University of Birmingham, where she directs the ERC-funded Global Literary Theory project. She has written for the general public in The London Review of BooksThe Global & Mail, and World Policy Journal and her writing has been translated into eleven languages.

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Product Information

General Fields

  • : 9781839769023
  • : Bloomsbury
  • : Verso Trade
  • : 0.1642
  • : 01 November 2023
  • : .49 Inches X 5.53 Inches X 8.27 Inches
  • : 01 November 2023
  • : books

Special Fields

  • : Rebecca Ruth Gould
  • : Paperback
  • : English
  • : 305.89240410904