Rooted Movements

Regular price €100.99
Title
Quantity:
Will Deliver When Available
Will Deliver When Available
Shipping & Delivery
A01=Amanda Batarseh
Arabic literary heritage
Author_Amanda Batarseh
British Mandate
carceral geography
cartography
Category=DNT
cultural production
decolonization
diaspora
displacement
Edward Said
eq_anthologies-novellas-short-stories
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_fiction
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
exile
folk narrative
forthcoming
genocide
genre disruption
haunting
Hussein Barghouthi
imaginative geography
imprisonment
Indigeneity
land narrative
literary cartography
literary criticism
Middle East studies
Nakba
nationhood
olive tree
Ottoman Palestine
Palestine
Palestinian feminism
Palestinian identity
Palestinian literature
Palestinian studies
refugee
resistance
settler colonialism
spatial ontology
speculative fiction
Tel Aviv
trans-Indigenous
uprooting
YafaJaffa
Zionism

Product details

  • ISBN 9780815612216
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 21 Oct 2026
  • Publisher: Syracuse University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
Secure checkout Fast Shipping Easy returns

Present in the heart of modern Palestinian literature is a pervasive sense of rootedness, sustained and nurtured by a deep care for land stewardship and embedded in a spatialized history. In Rooted Movements, Amanda Batarseh examines the epistemology of Palestinian Indigeneity based in a radical relationship to place. Against a colonial logic that often centers displacement as the chief lens through which to understand Palestinian connection to place and spatialized existence, Batarseh argues that Palestinian literature poses Indigeneity as a dialectic relying as much upon rootedness as on ideas of movement.

In elaborating this tension, Batarseh develops a methodology of reading Palestinian literature that foregrounds how Palestinians negotiate space and removal through liberatory mobilization and not as a symptom of zionist, colonial violence. Reading the poetry, creative nonfiction, essays, novels, and films of writers in Palestine and in exile—from Ghassan Kanafani to Naomi Shihab Nye, Hussein Barghouthi, Raja Shehadeh, Ibtisam Azem, and Randa Jarrar—she exposes the limitations of focusing on the geopolitical borders of a modern nation-state and offers alternative imaginaries not bound by colonial spatial control. Instead, the Palestinian poetics of space Batarseh articulates engage rooted movement as an Indigenous expression of deep-seated and enduring connections to place. Palestine, this place, is not static, enclosed by military boundaries, or frozen in time before or after the Nakba, but generative and looking toward a Palestinian future.

Amanda Batarseh is an assistant professor of literature at the University of California, San Diego, where her research and teaching focus on Palestinian literature with a broader focus on Arab cultural production in and outside of Arabic, Indigenous studies, and Mediterranean studies.

More from this author