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1,569 result(s) for "Herzl, Theodor (1860-1904)"
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آباء الحركة الصهيوينة : هرتسل جابوتنسكي، وايزمن بن غوريون
هذا الكتاب يترجم لأربعة من اليهود الأوائل سخروا أنفسهم لخدمة بني جلدتهم وتحلقوا حول هدف أقام وطن قومي لليهود ويلقي الضوء على مجموعة السبل التي طرقوها لتحقيق هدفهم المنشود مستفيدين من الواقع والمتغيرات الدولية دون كلل أو ملل إلى أن تحققت أمنيتهم ولو أن بعضهم لم يشهدها بإقامة دولة إسرائيل على أرض فلسطين العربية بعد تهجير أهلها بإرهاب صهيوني استعماري منظم ويؤكد حقيقة طالما أغفلها بعض زعماء العرب الذين يعملون ليومهم ويتركون الغد فريسة للمجهوا فيما يخطط أعداؤهم لمستقبل يتاوز السنين.
“Our Good Friend and Illustrious Coreligionist Theodor Herzl”: The Three Interviews of La epoka with the Zionist Leader and Hamidian Censorship
La epoka was a Ladino newspaper published in Salonica. Its editor Sam Lévy published three interviews with Theodor Herzl between 1901 and 1904. His announcement and subsequent publication of the third interview drew angry responses from the Sublime Porte, which ordered the governor of Salonica to close it down. The governor resisted the orders and La epoka remained open, even publishing a eulogistic obituary of Herzl. In this article, I examine these interviews and obituary, showing that Lévy combined his sharp criticisms of Zionism with an adulation of the Zionist leader. I also explore Ottoman archival documents about the Ladino press and argue that Hamidian censorship could be flexible according to political circumstances, overlooking Lévy’s first two interviews that were made during the Ottoman government’s negotiations with Herzl, yet reacting sharply to the third interview conducted afterward and containing direct references to the Sixth Zionist Congress.
تيودور هرتزل : مؤسس الحركة الصهيونية
إن حكمة هذا الشعار لا تخفى على أحد ولكن ليس من السهل دائما أن يعرف الإنسان عدوه ؛ إذ لا بد من توافر دراسات نزيهة لمعرفة العدو. ويعتبر كتاب هرتزل أول دراسة موضوعية جادة يقدمها كاتب غربي غير صهيوني. ففيه يلقي ديزموند ستيوارت، الكاتب البريطاني المعروف باهتماماته بشؤون المنطقة، الأضواء على العديد من الجوانب الخفية في حياة مؤسس الحركة الصهيونية ومفكرها الأول، ونشأة وأصول الحركة الصهيونية وارتباطاتها الاستعمارية التي أدت إلى اغتصاب فلسطين وتهديد مستقبل الأمة العربية. إنه كتاب شيق وهام عن شخصية لعبت دورا كبيرا في تاريخ الكيان الصهيوني.
Power and Technology in Theodor Herzl's Zionist Plan
The article traces the role of technical expertise and modern technology in Herzl's Zionist plan. Writers about Herzl have claimed misleadingly that in keeping with his vision, expertise and technology were to be subject to social and political controls. However, a closer examination of Herzl's accounts of the Zionist movement and later on, of the Jewish state reveals that the experts and their highly centralized technical systems were themselves the driving force behind Herzl's envisioned Zionist enterprise. The article seeks to elucidate Herzl's distinctive notion of technological control as the sociopolitical underpinning of his Zionist plan.
HERZL’S THEOLOGY
Theodor Herzl published his utopian romance, Altneuland, in 1902. A spirited debate soon broke out, spurred by Ahad Ha'am's assertion that the state envisioned by Herzl had no specifically Jewish elements and was no different from a \"normal\" European state. Many scholars have adopted Ahad Ha'am's reading and seen the utopian polity of Altneuland as devoid of any meaningful Jewish identity. In recent years, however, several studies have emphasized the Jewish dimension of the state Herzl described and highlighted his attempt to establish a new Jewish identity on a secular national basis.
Prosaic Conditions
In her penetrating new study, Na'ama Rokem observes that prose writing-more than poetry, drama, or other genres-came to signify a historic rift that resulted in loss and disenchantment. InProsaic Conditions,Rokem treats prose as a signifying practice-that is, a practice that creates meaning. During the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, prose emerges in competition with other existing practices, specifically, the practice of performance. Using Zionist literature as a test case, Rokem examines the ways in which Zionist authors put prose to use, both as a concept and as a literary mode. Writing prose enables these authors to grapple with historical, political, and spatial transformations and to understand the interrelatedness of all of these changes.
Theodor Herzl
In 2004 the one-hundredth anniversary of Theodor Herzl's death was commemorated throughout the world. The myth of Herzl, as it has developed over the last century, has perhaps become more important than the historical figure. This volume contains revised and expanded essays, which were originally delivered as lectures at international Herzl centennial conferences in Antwerp, London, and Jerusalem. Topics treated include the Herzl myth, Herzl's nationalism and Zionism, his self-understanding and image, his authorship of comedies and philosophical tales, Herzl and Africa, as well as his reception in Israeli and other literature. Zweig films are also considered within this same context.
The Dissolution of Utopia: Literary Representations of the City of Haifa, between Herzl’s Altneuland and Later Israeli Works
[...]the play recreates it for its audience as a consoling myth, as a lost paradise to long for - a paradise that maybe, only maybe, could have existed had the choice been made of a non-national, multicultural, cosmopolitan Haifa, where Jews, Arabs, British and others could have all lived together in peace. [...]by contrast with the utopian Haifa imagined by Herzl in 1902, an ideal city, impeccably planned, a beautiful, just, cosmopolitan city that harmoniously blends with the nature, while its inhabitants are integrated into both space and the new society without any difficulties stemming from language or ethnic complications, the three Israeli works examined represent a fractured Haifa, embroiled in complex frictions between individual and society, as well as between language, ethnicity, and space. [...]could a non-national, cosmopolitan existence have given these questions better answers, maybe even utopian ones, than national existence?
\This Ship Is Zion!\ Travel, Tourism, and Cultural Zionism in Theodor Herzl's \Altneuland\
One of the central elements of Herzlian spatial-political thought that has been filtered out of the deterministic historiographical discourse on Herzl-the-visionary-of-the-nation-state is that of travel and tourism, as well as the cultural significance and political context of the representations of travel and tourism in his utopian-political novel Altneuland. The present article argues, however, that it is precisely through accounting for the notions of travel and tourism at work in Theodor Herzl's Altneuland that one can appreciate Herzl’s perception of homecoming in its full complexity. The development of this argument is divided into the following three areas: (1) a survey of the expressions of the theme of travel and tourism in Altneuland which have been largely overlooked by virtually all the historians, political scientists and literary scholars dealing with Herzl’s novel; (2) a rethinking of the cultural and political aspects of Herzlian Zionism given the appropriate assessment of the role played by the motif(s) of travel and tourism in his vision of the future Palestine, as well as placing those aspects within the wider historical context of the contemporary development of political territorially-oriented national movements in the Habsburg Central Europe where Herzlian nationalism had emerged; (3) framing discussion on the journey element in the Herzlian Zionism in terms of relevant theoretical discourse on travel, tourism and homecoming, with purpose of drawing through the case of Herzl's employment of travel motifs some broad theoretical reflections on travel, Zionism and homecoming in the time (and space) of fin-de-siècle multiethnic empires.