Contributors
Introduction: “If not now, when?”
Gianni Vattimo & Michael Marder
Chapter 1: Anti-Semitism and Its Transformations
Slavoj Žižek
Chapter 2: How to Become an Anti-Zionist
Gianni Vattimo
Chapter 3: Is Judaism Zionism? Or, Arendt and the Critique of the
Nation-State
Judith Butler
Chapter 4: Decolonizing the Nation-State: Zionism in the Colonial
Horizon of Modernity
Walter Mignolo
Chapter 5: Karl Marx and Hannah Arendt on the Jewish Question:
Political Theology as a Critique
Artemy Magun
Chapter 6: Notes on the Prophetic Instability of Zionism
Marc H. Ellis
Chapter 7: The Spirit of Zionism: Derrida, Ruah, and the Purloined
Birthright
Christopher Wise
Chapter 8: Rex, or the Negation of Wandering
Ranjana Khanna
Chapter 9: The Hermeneutical Stance: Being Discharged at the
Margins of Political Zionism
Santiago Zabala
Chapter 10: The Zionist Synecdoche
Michael Marder
Chapter 11: Sharing Humanity: Towards Peaceful Coexistence in
Difference
Luce Irigaray
Index
This Political Theory and Contemporary Philosophy volume offers a critique of the foundations of the Zionist project and its culmination in the state of Israel.
Gianni Vattimo is emeritus professor of philosophy at the
University of Turin and a member of the European Parliament. He is
the author of Hermeneutic Communism (co-authored with S. Zabala), A
Farewell to Truth; The Responsibility of the Philosopher;
Christianity, Truth, and Weakening Faith (with R. Girard); Not
Being God: A Collaborative Autobiography (with P. Paterlini); Art’s
Claim to Truth; After the Death of God (with John D. Caputo);
Dialogue with Nietzsche; The Future of Religion (with Richard
Rorty); Nihilism and Emancipation: Ethics, Politics, and Law; and
After Christianity.
Michael Marder is Ikerbasque Research Professor in the
Department of Philosophy at the University of the Basque Country,
Vitoria-Gasteiz. He is the Associate Editor of Telos: A Quarterly
Journal of Critical Thought and the author of The Event of The
Thing: Derrida's Post-Deconstructive Realism (2009).
Deconstructing Zionism is by turn spectacular, compelling,
difficult and tangential. For a practical-minded reader of
politics, the contributions discussed here count amongst the
best.
*New Zealand International Review*
As timely as one can get...Deconstructing Zionism serves as an
important reminder that Zionism as such can never be simply
deconstructed (indeed, the title of the volume is not Zionism
Deconstructed), or its ideology set aside. Its appeal remains
strong if not blinding. And as long as injustice for the
Palestinians continues, Zionism will be there to justify the status
quo, to deflect blame onto the other —whence the need for
deconstructing it.
*Journal of the Society for Contemporary Thought in the Islamicate
World*
A volume of eleven essays edited and introduced by a prominent
Italian philosopher and public intellectual (Vattimo) and a
polymathic young academic (Marder), Deconstructing Zionism is
admirable for the revealing light through which it re-reads a
phenomenon that, as the book’s title aptly suggests, exemplifies
the seemingly inextricability of politics from metaphysics —
Zionism.
*Middle East Media and Book Reviews Online*
[A] welcome addition to the critique of Zionism.
*E-International Relations*
To open, to disassemble, to examine of what the assemblage is made.
To think its conditions, its stakes, its possible or vanished
meaning anew. That is what 'deconstruction' means. It arises from a
real consideration, in the strongest sense, of the chosen object.
Today, it is obviously necessary to make Zionism that object, among
others—not only the word itself but also all the significations it
carries. That is why one must salute the initiative behind this
book.
*Jean-Luc Nancy, Professor Emeritus, Strasbourg, France*
This unique book includes perceptive analyses of Zionism by some of
today's leading philosophers. A 'must read' for anyone seeking the
theoretical tools to address the conflict in the Middle East and
committed to global social justice.
*Simon Critchley, Hans Jonas Professor of Philosophy, The New
School for Social Research*
For those of us who believe that the political and moral health of
the global world depends on a just and fair solution to the
problems that beset Palestine/Israel, this book is an illuminating
contribution. These essays written by diverse and gifted hands
explore the politics of nationhood and territorial coexistence from
a plurality of philosophical, theological, and secular
perspectives. The most interesting essays lead us towards the
condition of the Middle East via a reflection on other political
situations defined by proximity, ambivalence, and antagonism. This
is an ambitious and engrossing volume.
*Homi K. Bhabha, Anne F. Rothenberg Professor of the Humanities,
Harvard University, US*
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