Introduction: Writing Middle Eastern History in a Time of
Historical Amnesia
1. Arab Society in Mandatory Palestine
2. The Palestinians and the British Mandate
3. A Failure of Leadership
4. The Revolt, 1948, and Afterwards
5. Fateh, the PLO, and the PA: The Palestinian Para-State
6. Stateless in Palestine
A brilliant and sobering critique of the Palestinian failure to achieve statehood, by a major Palestinian historian and political commentator
Rashid Khalidi, author of "Resurrectinge Empire" and "Palestinian Identity", holds the Edward Said Chair in Arab Studies at Columbia Univeristy, where he heads the Middle East Institute. He has written more than eighty articles [and five books] on Middle Eastern History and politics, as well as op-ed pieces in the New York Times, the Boston Globe, the Los Angeles Times, the Chicago Tribune, and The Nation. He lives in New York.
"A work of forceful historical analysis written in a spirit of
self-examination . . . 'The Iron Cage' compels us to reflect more
deeply on the problems that continue to bedevil the Palistinain
movement."
*The Nation*
"the book will delight everyone sick to death of following the
minutiae of the "peace process" and the inevitable apportioning of
blame for its failure. Equally, it is a godsend for those new to
the subject, as it presents a strong analysis within a frameworkd
that is comparable across colonized peoples."
*International History Review*
"'The Iron Cage' is a patient and eloquent work, ranging over the
whole of modern Palestinian history from World War I to the death
of Yasser Arafat. Reorienting the Palestinain narrative around the
attitudes and tactics of the Palestinians themselves, Khalidi lends
a remarkable illumination to a story so wearily familiar it is
often hard to believe anything new can be found within." Jonathan
Shainin
*Salon*
"Khalidi asks crucial questions regarding the state of Palestinian
identity and viability that no other historians or political
analysts have covered with such depth." Alejandra Ju
*Political Affairs*
"Khalidi's book is no exercise in victimology. He is tough on the
British, the Israelis, and the Americans, but she is scarcely less
hard-hitting in appraising the Palestinians. The final chapter
provides an excellent critique of the Palestine Liberation
Organization's labored moves toward the recognition of Israel and
the idea, increasingly bruited, that a two-state solution is no
longer feasible." L. Carl Brown
*Foreign Affairs*
"A must-read historical and political study of the national
Palestinian movement . . . Supporters of the Palestinians and of
Israel will read this book in different ways and with different
eyes, but both will find Khalidi's presentation richly
illuminating." Neil Caplan
*The Middle East Journal*
"[Khalidi's] most accomplished effort to date . . . Magesterial in
scope, meticulous in its attention to detail, and decidedly
dispassionate in its analysis, 'The Iron Cage' is destined to be a
benchmark of its genre." Joel Schalit
*Tikkun*
"A first-rate and up-to-date historical and political analaysis of
the Palestinian predicament."
*Publishers Weekly*
"A lucid and compelling examination of the Palestinian dilemma by
'arguably the foremost US historian of the modern Middle East'."
Warren I. Cohen
*Los Angeles Times Book Review*
"Khalidi, tackling ‘historical amnesia,’ brilliantly analyses the
structural handicap which hobbled the Palestinians throughout 30
years of British rule . . . Khalidi restores the Palestinians to
something more than victims, acknowledging that for all their
disadvantages, they have played their role and can (and must) still
do so to determine their own fate."
*The Guardian*
"Khalid [has] done much to provide a Palestinian narrative rooted
in personal histories but disciplined by the standards of Western
scholarship."
*The New York Times*
"Khalidi, tackling ‘historical amnesia,’ brilliantly analyses the
structural handicap which hobbled the Palestinians throughout 30
years of British rule . . . restor[ing] the Palestinians to
something more than victims."
*The Guardian*
"Khalidi [has] done much to provide a Palestinian narrative rooted
in personal histories but disciplined by the standards of Western
scholarship."
*The New York Times*
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