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The Shaping of a Nation: Palestinians in the Last Century of Ottoman Rule

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 July 2015

Joel S. Migdal
Affiliation:
University of Washington, Jackson School of International Studies and Hebrew University, Department of Sociology
Baruch Kimmerling
Affiliation:
University of Washington, Jackson School of International Studies and Hebrew University, Department of Sociology

Extract

No period was more decisive in the modern history of Palestine than the British Mandate, which lasted from the end of World War I until 1948. Not only did British rule establish the political boundaries of Palestine, the new realities forced both Jews and Arabs in the country to redefine their social boundaries and self-identity. But the cataclysmic events that continued through 1948, with the creation of Israel and what Arabs called al-Nakba (the catastrophe of dispersal and exile), took shape in the wake of key changes stretching over the last century of Ottoman rule. What was to be Palestine after World War I became increasingly more integrated territorially during the nineteenth century. And Arab society in the last century of Ottoman rule underwent critical changes that paved the way for the emergence of a Palestinian people in the twentieth century.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © New Perspectives on Turkey 1994

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