âAs <i>Encountering Palestine</i> argues and makes clear âthe question of Palestine is an inherently geographical one.â In this collective volume we have a comprehensive account of the geographies of Israeli settler colonialism in Palestineâits contours of violence, spatial politics, frictions, intimacies, and resistances. Situating contemporary Palestinian colonial geographies in the past, present, and future, the chapters speak to ongoing struggles for liberation in Palestine and beyond, showing in the process how Palestinian life and, with it, resistance are both local and global.ââPolly Pallister-Wilkins, author of <i>Humanitarian Borders: Unequal Mobility and Saving Lives</i>
âFew works have explored the geographies of encounters. <i>Encountering Palestine</i> adds to the expansive scholarly work on the destructive consequences of settler-colonial spatial politics by formulating encounters as a productive site of meaning-making where Palestinian lives interact with various forms, techniques, and apparatuses of settler-colonial power.ââSomdeep Sen, author of <i>Decolonizing Palestine: Hamas between the Anticolonial and the Postcolonial</i>
â<i>Encountering Palestine</i> offers a new set of arguments about how to understand and frame colonial power and colonial encounters in Israel/Palestine. While the ongoing violence of Israeli colonialism and what the editors refer to as Palestinian woundedness slips in and out of the mainstream media, many chapters bring to the fore why this situation remains urgent even as so much of the violence described is slow or quiet. This collection makes a clear contribution to studies of Palestine/Israel and colonial studies more broadly.ââChristopher Harker, author of <i>Spacing Debt: Obligations, Violence, and Endurance in Ramallah, Palestine</i>