June 1967 in Personal Stories of Palestinians and Israelis
Contributor(s)
Bendix, Regina F. (editor)
Haidar, Aziz (editor)
Salamon, Hagar (editor)
Language
EnglishAbstract
The clash of June 1967, called by Israelis the Six-Day War and by Palestinians
the Naksa (setback), is a critical milestone within the longstanding Israeli-
Palestinian conflict. Despite all the scholarly attention ever since, there remain
unheard voices and untold stories. It is the personal stories of people in the
region that are at the center of this book. How do they remember 1967? How
were their lives affected, even changed dramatically as a result of that short war?
Listening to their stories as told some 50 years later, an incomplete tapestry
of memories and understandings emerge. This book is the product of a re-
search collaboration among Palestinian, Israeli and European folklorists, cultural
anthropologists and sociologists. The personal stories were collected in the
framework of interviews with men and women from all walks of life, on the days
before, during and after this dramatic confrontation. The book is comprised of
eleven chapters based on a corpus of several hundred conversations, as well
as eight representative interviews. Together they afford insight into differential
memories and sensations, visions of euphoria and despair, newly revived hopes,
pain and disappointment, disillusionment and repentance.
Keywords
Naksa; Six-Day War; conflictDOI
10.17875/gup2022-1956ISBN
978-3-86395-529-8Publisher
Universitätsverlag GöttingenPublication date and place
2022Classification
Society and Social Sciences