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Hizbullah and the Politics of Remembrance: Writing the Lebanese Nation (Cambridge Middle East Studies)

Hizbullah and the Politics of Remembrance: Writing the Lebanese Nation (Cambridge Middle East Studies)

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Bashir Saade
Cambridge University Press, 8/16/2016
EAN 9781107101814, ISBN10: 1107101816

Hardcover, 188 pages, 22.8 x 15.2 x 1.4 cm
Language: English

Born out of the Israeli occupation of the South of Lebanon, the political armed group Hizbullah is a powerful player within both Lebanon and the wider Middle East. Understanding how Hizbullah has, since the 1980s, developed its own reading of the nature of the Lebanese state, national identity and historical narrative is central to grasping the political trajectory of the country. By examining the ideological production of Hizbullah, especially its underground newspaper Al Ahd, Bashir Saade offers an account of the intellectual continuity between the early phases of Hizbullah's emergence onto the political stage and its present day organization. Saade argues here that this early intellectual activity, involving an elaborate understanding of the past and history had a long lasting impact on later cultural production, one in which the notion and practice of Resistance has been central in developing national imaginaries.

Introduction
1. Mapping the ground of Hizbullah's ideological production
2. Martyrology and conceptions of time in Hizbullah's writing practices
3. Imagining the Lebanese Christians through writing history
4. The debt to the left and the enemy
the politics of resistance
5. Confronting the state
writing space and Hizbullah's politics of legitimacy
Epilogue. Confronting the state
between party and community
Conclusion.