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1. Introduction: Palestine in a Transnational Context–Timothy Mitchell, Gyan Prakash, and Ella Shohat
2. Nation Validation: Modern Palestinian Literature and the Politics of Appeasement–Salah D. Hassan
3. 1948: Law, History, Memory–Samera Esmeir
4. Rupture and Return: Zionist Discourse and the Study of Arab Jews–Ella Shohat
5. The Incorporation of the Palestinian Minority by the Israeli State, 1948–1970: On the Nature, Transformation, and Constraints of Collaboration–Ahmad H. Sa’di
6. Visions of the Future during Political Transitions: Comparing Afrikaner and Israeli Attitudes–Heribert Adam
7. Notes from the Princeton Divestment Campaign–Vincent Lloyd and Zia Mian
8. The Israelization of American Middle East Policy Discourse–Joel Beinin
9. House and Homeland: Examining Sentiments about and Claims to Jerusalem and Its Houses–Amahl Bishara
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In the three years since the outbreak of the second Intifada in October 2000, the policy-making of the U.S. government has been haunted by the question of Palestine. While the United States has always been allied to and supportive of Israel, since September 11, 2001, its policy has shifted even closer to the Israeli regional agenda.
This special issue places the Palestine question in a transnational and comparative frame that strives to better depict its historical complexity. The issue also gives special consideration to the different modes of Palestinian resistance both within and outside the state of Israel and the occupied territories.