Land and Power: The Zionist Resort to Force, 1881-1948

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Author: Anita Shapira

ISBN-10: 0804737762

ISBN-13: 9780804737760

Category: Zionism

“A rich and sophisticated work that nicely complements more conventional political-historical studies of the Arab-Israeli conflict. . . . A landmark book that is an outstanding contribution to the history of Zionist political thought and culture.”—American Historical Review\ “This is a superb book . . . well-researched, detailed, and scholarly.”—The Historian

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No other issue so dramatically demonstrates the deep change which occurred during the last century in the image of the Jew, as the attitude toward the use of force. A people who were characterized as averse to violence and all forms of fighting, adopted military might as its identity symbol. Shapira traces the road along which the Zionist movement discarded its early mission of peaceful settlement in Palestine, to the incorporation of the use of force as a legitimate tool for realizing the idea of Jewish national sovereignty there. The emergence of a new, "Israeli" national ethos, accompanied by its particular symbols, myths, and norms, is the topic of this book. The evolution of a "defensive ethos" in the early decades of the century neglected the scruples and inhibitions of first generation socialist Zionist settlers. The appearance in the 1940s of an "offensive ethos" coincided with the coming of age of a new native-born generation, unfettered by their fathers' sensitivities. Shapira argues that it indicated that the barriers of ideology, moral norms, and mental restraints constructed by the founding fathers, proved unequal to the impact of social and political realities of colonization.

IThe Crystallization of a Defensive Ethos, 1881-19211The Birth of a National Ethos32The First and Second Aliyah533The Emergence of the Defensive Ethos83IIThe Heyday of the Defensive Ethos, 1922-19364The First Challenge, 1922-19291295The Second Challenge, 1929-1936173IIIThe Shift to an Offensive Ethos, 1936-19476The Arab Rebellion2197Consolidation, 1939-1947277Conclusion: The Birth of the State353Notes371Glossary416Bibliography423Index431

\ From the Publisher"This is a superb book . . . well-researched, detailed, and scholarly."—The Historian\ \ \