×
Uh-oh, it looks like your Internet Explorer is out of date.
For a better shopping experience, please upgrade now.

A Quiet Revolution: The First Palestinian Intifada and Nonviolent Resistance
488
by Mary Elizabeth King, Jimmy Carter (Introduction)Mary Elizabeth King
20.99
Out Of Stock
Overview
In A Quiet Revolution, renowned civil rights activist Mary Elizabeth King questions the prevailing wisdom that the first Palestinian Intifada was defined by violence. She argues that initially, the uprising was characterized by a massive nonviolent social mobilization, rooted in popular committees often steered by women. These committees adopted strategies that began to lead to political results among them the beginnings of a negotiated settlement. King traces the tragic movement away from peaceful protest following the killing of four Palestinian laborers in Gaza, and charts the PLOs increasing contempt for nonviolent struggle. She details the complicity of the media in this escalation of violence TV crews would not cover peaceful protests, but Palestinian boys throwing rocks at Israeli soldiers would attract foreign cameras. King draws upon the history of non-violent movements and argues that only through nonviolent strategies can a negotiated peace be achieved with Israel. King believes that the residual knowledge of the power of nonviolent resistance from the first Intifada will provide the bedrock upon which to build this eventual, lasting peace.
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9781560258025 |
---|---|
Publisher: | PublicAffairs |
Publication date: | 06/28/2007 |
Pages: | 488 |
Product dimensions: | 6.00(w) x 8.90(h) x 1.10(d) |
About the Author
Mary Elizabeth King is an expert on Nonviolent Political Strategies and worked alongside Martin Luther King, Jr. as a student. She is a Professor of Peace and Conflict Studies at the University for Peace of the UN, and a Distinguished Scholar at the American University Center for Global Peace in Washington, DC. She is the author of Freedom Song (which won the RFK Memorial Book Award) and Mahatma Ghandi and Martin Luther King, Jr.: The Power of Nonviolent Action. King lives in Washington, DC.
Customer Reviews
Related Searches
Explore More Items
One of Time Magazine's Must-Read Books of 2019: An award-winning journalist shows how workplace diversity ...
One of Time Magazine's Must-Read Books of 2019: An award-winning journalist shows how workplace diversity
initiatives have turned into a profoundly misguided industry—and have done little to bring equality to America's major industries and institutions. Diversity has become the new ...
The tragic events of September 11, 2001 brought to the surface memories of an earlier ...
The tragic events of September 11, 2001 brought to the surface memories of an earlier
time of unprecedented national emergency Pearl Harbor and America's subsequent involvement in World War II. In this evocative cultural history, Richard Lingeman re-creates ...
Everyone in the world knows what Bill Clinton did with Monica Lewinsky, or what happened ...
Everyone in the world knows what Bill Clinton did with Monica Lewinsky, or what happened
to Brad and Jennifer, Katie and Tom. These factoids mysteriously capture the world's attention. But there's a flip side to this: fog facts. Fog facts ...
Using this helpful book, learn how the secret to happiness and longevity can be found ...
Using this helpful book, learn how the secret to happiness and longevity can be found
through mentoring the next generation.In How to Live Forever, Encore.org founder and CEO Marc Freedman tells the story of his thirty-year quest to answer some ...
To his friends and neighbors, Glenn L. Carle was a wholesome, stereotypical New England Yankee, ...
To his friends and neighbors, Glenn L. Carle was a wholesome, stereotypical New England Yankee,
a former athlete struggling against incipient middle age, someone always with his nose in an abstruse book. But for two decades Carle broke laws, stole, ...
At a time when tempers flare over the Oregon assisted suicide law and Jack Kevorkian's
physician-aid-in-dying, Last Wish, Betty Rollin's groundbreaking New York Times bestseller, is due for a rereading. Last Wish is an intimate, fiercely honest memoir of a ...
Every Sunday evening, millions of viewers tune in to 60 Minutes to hear Andy Rooney ...
Every Sunday evening, millions of viewers tune in to 60 Minutes to hear Andy Rooney
riff on everything from coffee percolators to the state of the union. Millions more read his weekly newspaper column. Why? Because Rooney tells it like ...
In 2005, The Woman at the Washington Zoo was published to major critical acclaim. The ...
In 2005, The Woman at the Washington Zoo was published to major critical acclaim. The
late Marjorie Williams possessed a special voice, one capable not just of canny political observations but of tenderness and bracing intimacy, observed the New York ...