Edward Said's 'The Question of Palestine' (Part 3 of 3)

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In this episode, I conclude Edward Said's "The Question of Palestine" by covering chapters 3 and 4.

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Twitter: @DavidGuignion
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Thank you for this. I’ve been wanting to learn more about this history and the work on it but had been too intimidated by the sheer volume of it. This gave me a starting point and I’m now looking forward to learning more.

christopherjohnson
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Thank you for doing this series David.

sebastienleroy
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Thankd for remembering Said at this time.

gregpappas
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Thank you for providing this resource. Like others I've wanted to learn more but just don't have it in my means to handle the primary sources like yourself. I appreciate your rational analysis and moral outrage of these current and historical events.

lukedmoss
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Thank you for teaching this information in such a way as to make it accessible to people who are not well versed in the history and politics. Like others here I wanted to learn more, and have been, but was intimidated by the volume of information available and didn't know where to start.

And I'm glad you're emotional about it. You cannot be "too emotional" about a genocide.

Thank you

sorrelbee
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The point of philosophy is not just to examine the world but to change it! :)

Giantcrabz
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Thanks for the episodes and all of your work. Just wanted to raise a flag that Naguib Mahfouz is an Egyptian writer, not a Palestinian, and it seems to be not mentioned already in the comments.

islamsalahuddin
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Another side note, if I may, Israel can hardly be seen as having given up on Sinai because they didn't care about it or because they had "too much land" already. Egypt, alongside many Arab states, had to fight a long tiring six-year attrition war after 1967, ending up with 1973 War, with many deaths of course, just to regain that piece of land. What was regained through the peace treaty is only a small city on the border named Taba.

islamsalahuddin