This is an important book: a historically sensitive and theoretically rigorous intervention on behalf of the Palestinian cause and at the same time a thorough critique of every form of exceptionalism and exemplarity that shores up the totality of the human condition in the name of one chosen cause, suffering, or people. In addition, Zahi Zalloua does a commendable job of exposing the blind spots of so called radical continental philosophers and their Eurocentric mis-recognition of the Palestinian Question.
- R. Radhakrishnan, Chancellor's Professor of English and Comparative Literature, University of California, Irvine, USA,
If one of the most emblematic tragedies of the twentieth century unfolded under the heading of the “Jewish Question,” in the twenty-first century we are confronted by the “Palestinian Question.” Zalloua’s excellent book is one of the few studies available that addresses the issue philosophically and raises this pressing question not only relying upon but also dialoguing with and critically modifying the resources of Continental thought. Not to be missed by postcolonial theorists and philosophers alike!
Michael Marder, Research Professor, Ikerbasque, Department of Philosophy, University of the Basque Country, Spain & Professor at Large, Humanities Institute, Diego Portales University, Chile
In this searing, courageous and long overdue book, Zahi Zalloua asks how a Levinasian ethics of the other translates into specific historical and political life marked by relentless subjugation and injustice. The question of the other is asked where in the end it matters most: What about the other deemed illegitimate in the eyes of the majoritarian community? Pushing beyond the dyad of the “Greek” and the “Jew,” Zalloua engages philosophers from Levinas to Said, with Agamben, Badiou, Butler, Blanchot, Deleuze, Derrida, Finkielkraut, Rancière, Žižek and others, to account for the ways in which continental philosophy has addressed the Palestinian Question over the last two decades. Deconstructing the faceless Palestinian, the ungrievable <i>homo sacer</i> deemed unavailable for an ethical encounter, Zalloua exposes the need for an alternative to the account of radical alterity and its historical and political bias. A book to be urgently read and discussed.
Elisabeth Saatjian Weber, Professor of German and Comparative Literature Chair, Department of Germanic and Slavic Studies, University of California, USA
In the tradition of Césaire and Fanon, Zahi Zalloua provides penetrating insight into the heart of the humanist project, revealing a profound crisis around the haunting figure of the Palestinian. Capacious and breathtaking, Zalloua’s book traces this deafening silence. The last sky is upon us and Zahi Zalloua’s masterful work is as vital as it is urgent
- Sohail Daulatzai, Associate Professor, Film and Media Studies - University of California, Irvine, USA,