WEIRD: Political feeling and the emergence of dissent in Israeli Solidarity Activists

Callan, Brian. 2024. WEIRD: Political feeling and the emergence of dissent in Israeli Solidarity Activists. Contention: The Multidisciplinary Journal of Social Protest, ISSN 2572-7184 [Article] (Forthcoming)

No full text available
[img] Text
2244-Article+Text-6232-1-2-20200708_final.pdf - Accepted Version
Permissions: Administrator Access Only until 5 October 2025.
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial No Derivatives.

Download (367kB)

Abstract or Description

Based on ethnographic research on Palestinian Solidarity Activism in and around Jerusalem, this paper argues that Weirdness is a political feeling. Taking emotion as a form of ‘wordless knowledge’ (Damasio, 2000), mediated through the Israeli national narrative, the feeling of Weirdness emerges when the expectations of Israelis fail to accord with the practices of military occupation. This is not an intense or overwhelming affect, it does not drive us to fight or flight, nor bring us to tears. However, repeated encounters with the failure of their knowledge systems, have brought some Israelis to doubt the validity and logic of hegemonic Zionism. Doubt, Hannah Arendt (1971) believed, was the outcome of Thinking, a human faculty which could condition men against evil-doing. In enabling and augmenting the emergence of doubt, Weirdness is a political emotion and one which may play a significant role in the emergence of resistance to the vested interests of oppressive structures in societies everywhere.

Item Type:

Article

Keywords:

affect, social movements, Israel-Palestine, phenomenology, Arendt

Departments, Centres and Research Units:

Social, Therapeutic & Community Engagement (STaCS)
Social, Therapeutic & Community Engagement (STaCS) > Centre for Community Engagement Research

Dates:

DateEvent
5 April 2024Accepted

Item ID:

36386

Date Deposited:

23 May 2024 14:59

Last Modified:

23 May 2024 15:38

Peer Reviewed:

Yes, this version has been peer-reviewed.

URI:

https://research.gold.ac.uk/id/eprint/36386

View statistics for this item...

Edit Record Edit Record (login required)