Since its foundation in 1948, Israel has drawn on Zionism, the movement
behind its creation, to provide a sense of self and political direction.
In this groundbreaking new work, Ilan Pappe looks at the continued role
of Zionist ideology. The Idea of Israel considers the way Zionism
operates outside of the government and military in areas such as the
country's education system, media, and cinema, and the uses that are
made of the Holocaust in supporting the state's ideological structure.
In particular, Pappe examines the way successive generations of
historians have framed the
1948 conflict as a liberation campaign, creating a foundation myth that
went unquestioned in Israeli society until the 1990s. Pappe himself was
part of the post-Zionist movement that arose then. He was attacked and
received death threats as he exposed the truth about how Palestinians
have been treated and the gruesome structure that links the production
of knowledge to the exercise of power. The Idea of Israel is a
powerful and urgent intervention in the war of ideas concerning the
past, and the future, of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict.