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Journal articles on the topic 'Palestinian Arabic'

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1

Ujvari, Montaser Motia. "Linguistic Landscape in the West Bank: Road Signs as Manifestations of Occupation." International Journal of Language and Literary Studies 4, no. 1 (2022): 374–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.36892/ijlls.v4i1.881.

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This study investigates road signs put in place by Israel in Area C in the occupied West Bank. It discusses how language on road signs in the West Bank serve as tool that enforces Israeli dominance over the area and blurs the Palestinian existence. This dominance is reflected in the excessive placement of signs referring to Israeli settlements compared to signs referring to Palestinian communities, transliteration of Arabic names of sites into Hebrew, and deletion of Arabic, a language associated with the Palestinian identity, from road signs. In addition, this paper demonstrates how the exclu
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2

A. Swaitti, Tasnim, and Krishna Yeshoda. "The Phonological Change in Hebrew Words Borrowed into Palestinian Arabic in Hebron City." Journal of Contemporary Language Research 2, no. 1 (2023): 49–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.58803/jclr.2023.388400.1012.

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Introduction: Phonology is one of the core subfields of linguistics that involves the organization and use of human speech sounds, or phonemes, in a language. Over time, the pronunciation principles of a language may change, resulting in a phenomenon called phonological change. Phonological change occurs when language users modify the distribution of phonemes in a language. The current study aimed to explain the phonological changes that occur in Hebrew words borrowed into Palestinian Arabic in Hebron city, using a borrowing scale and to explain the differences in phonological forms between He
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Amara, Muhammad. "Hebraic, the emerging new variety among Palestinians in Israel: Characteristics and sociolinguistic reflections." Journal of Arabic Sociolinguistics 2, no. 1 (2024): 33–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/arabic.2024.0021.

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Language is not abstracted from reality but responds to emerging changes. Arabic-Hebrew contact among Palestinians in Israel offers a fertile background for a study of sociopolitical conflicts, given the unique civil and national status of Palestinian citizens of Israel, a polity defined and perceived as a Jewish state. The current article focuses on Arabic-Hebrew contact in Israel. More specifically, it describes Hebraic, the formation of a “new variety” – Arabic mixed with Hebrew in the linguistic repertoire of Palestinian Arabs, citizens of Israel. The linguistic characteristics and the mot
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Sorek, Tamir. "Cautious Commemoration: Localism, Communalism, and Nationalism in Palestinian Memorial Monuments in Israel." Comparative Studies in Society and History 50, no. 2 (2008): 337–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0010417508000169.

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In March 1998, the political leadership of the Arab-Palestinian citizens of Israel was looking for ways to commemorate al-Nakba (“The Disaster,” in Arabic), referring to the war of 1948, during which about 700,000 Palestinians were uprooted and hundreds of Palestinian villages were destroyed. This leadership, organized in the Follow-Up Committee (FUC), nominated a Nakba and Steadfastness Committee (NSC) chaired by the author Muhamad Ali Taha. Among the Committee's several initiatives, one gained front-page headlines in the Arabic media: a call for Arab municipalities to establish memorial monu
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Abdelmajid, Kaddouri. "The Reality of Computing the Values of Arabic Poetry and the Formation of Virtual Cultural Systems Towards Building a Semantic Ontology for Knowledge Values." Dzil Majaz: Journal of Arabic Literature 3, no. 1 (2025): 1–22. https://doi.org/10.58223/dzilmajaz.v3i1.342.

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The study of the role of the Arabic language in the liberation of the Palestinian people and Al-Aqsa Mosque is crucial for deeper exploration. This paper seeks to understand three aspects: First, it aims to explore how Arabic, as a mother tongue and religious language, influences the worldview and collective identity of the Palestinian people in their struggle. Second, it focuses on various forms of expression where Arabic is used to voice support for Palestine and Al-Aqsa Mosque. Third, it aims to analyze how Arabic is utilized in education and activism, impacting international understanding
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6

Ningsih, Wiwik Prasetiyo. "Daur al-Lughah al-‘Arabiyyah fi Da’mi Tahrir Palestine wa al-Masjid al-Aqsha." Dzil Majaz: Journal of Arabic Literature 3, no. 1 (2025): 23–44. https://doi.org/10.58223/dzilmajaz.v3i1.325.

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The study of the role of the Arabic language in the liberation of the Palestinian people and Al-Aqsa Mosque is crucial for deeper exploration. This paper seeks to understand three aspects: First, it aims to explore how Arabic, as a mother tongue and religious language, influences the worldview and collective identity of the Palestinian people in their struggle. Second, it focuses on various forms of expression where Arabic is used to voice support for Palestine and Al-Aqsa Mosque. Third, it aims to analyze how Arabic is utilized in education and activism, impacting international understanding
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7

Awais, Ihab Ahmed, Sujoud S. Awais, and Abeer Z. Alhossary. "Media Framing of the Israeli Arabic - Speaking Social Media Pages Directed to the Palestinian Audience." Jurnal Komunikasi: Malaysian Journal of Communication 38, no. 3 (2022): 304–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.17576/jkmjc-2022-3803-19.

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In recent years, Facebook and social media, in general, have become an essential and critical platform for Israel to direct its daily messages to all Arabs in general and the Palestinian audience in particular as part of its new digital diplomacy to polish its image among the Palestinian FB users. The Israeli occupation of the Palestinian land made Israel an oppressor state that the Palestinians consider the enemy. Since Israel cares about its public image and hopes to normalise this occupation, it attempted to directly exploit social media to interact with people via modern technology. This q
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8

Farag, Joseph R. "Politics and Pedagogy in Palestinian Women’s Anglophone Writing." College Literature 52, no. 2 (2025): 250–75. https://doi.org/10.1353/lit.2025.a953862.

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Abstract: This paper outlines the narrative strategies and compromises deployed in three prominent anglophone novels by Palestinian women: Susan Abulhawa’s Mornings in Jenin (2010), Selma Debbagh’s Out of It (2012), and Hala Alyan’s Salt Houses (2017). In contrast to Palestinian women authors writing in Arabic, undertaking a project of internal critique of Palestinian patriarchy, these three anglophone works anticipate a western readership and, in doing so, attempt to mediate between the marginalization of Palestinian women on the one hand and the orientalist, Islamophobic, and Zionist discour
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9

Amara, Muhammad Hasan. "Recent foreign language education policies in Palestine." Language Problems and Language Planning 27, no. 3 (2003): 217–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/lplp.27.3.02ama.

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The paper investigates the development of foreign language education policies in Palestine, at a time when the establishment of a Palestinian state has become a real option, and when, following the Oslo agreements, the Palestinians have become responsible for Palestinian education. As the New Palestinian Curriculum shows, an international orientation is clearly part of the policy, and accordingly the learning and teaching of languages are a primary concern in identity formation. Through Arabic the relations with the Arabic countries in the region can be maintained, while Hebrew and also Englis
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10

Assaf, Azim S. "Palestinian Students' Attitudes Towards Modern Standard Arabic and Palestinian City Arabic." RELC Journal 32, no. 2 (2001): 45–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/003368820103200204.

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11

Nassar, Maha. "Agency and Trauma in the Palestinian Struggle to Remain." American Historical Review 125, no. 2 (2020): 559–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ahr/rhaa181.

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Abstract Adel Manna’s Nakba and Survival: The Story of the Palestinians Who Remained in Haifa and the Galilee, 1948–1956 appeared in Arabic and Hebrew in 2016–2017. Manna’s book gives voice to the experience of the first generation of Palestinians living within the State of Israel. Here, four scholars of Palestinian and Israeli history review Nakba and Survival and weigh its importance for reckoning with the entangled history of the creation of Israel and the related dispossession of Palestinians during and after 1948.
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Amara, Muhammad. "My Enemy, My Neighbour: Characteristics and Challenges of Arabic Instruction in Israeli-Jewish Society." Journal of Holy Land and Palestine Studies 20, no. 1 (2021): 28–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/hlps.2021.0256.

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This article examines Arabic instruction in Israeli Hebrew schools with regard to the political, social, cultural, historical and pedagogical issues shaping it. It examines challenges facing Arabic instruction in Israel's education system, emphasising the dissonance between potential benefits of studying Arabic and its overall marginalised status in Israel. This article argues that that the main factors shaping Arabic instruction in Israeli-Jewish schools since 1948 are official security considerations and security claims — Arabic is studied as the language of the enemy and not the neighbour.
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13

Reger, Jeffrey D. "Olive Cultivation in the Galilee, 1948–1955: Hegemony and Resistance." Journal of Palestine Studies 46, no. 4 (2017): 28–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/jps.2017.46.4.28.

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Drawing on Arabic, English, and Hebrew language sources from the British and Israeli archives, this article seeks to bridge the catastrophic rupture of 1948 to the early 1950s and to trace the changing relationship between ordinary Palestinian olive cultivators in the Galilee and the newly established Israeli state. In contrast with studies that center on the continued expulsion of Palestinians and extension of control over land by the state and state-supported actors in the aftermath of the Nakba, this study examines those Palestinians who stayed on their land and how they responded to Israel
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14

Pullum, Lindsey. "‘I’m Interviewing a Sheep’." Middle East Journal of Culture and Communication 16, no. 1 (2023): 68–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/18739865-tat00004.

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Abstract In this article, I summarize the state of Arabic (as a medium and a message) in Israeli state media and compare attitudes towards the Arabic language with content from the popular bilingual (Arabic-Hebrew) sitcom written and created by a Palestinian-Israeli writer, Sayed Kashua. I argue that Kashua’s work in his show, Arab Labor, reiterates poor attitudes towards Arabic and foreshadows the ethnolinguistic erasure of Israel’s Nation-State Law of 2018. Using humor and satire within its content, context and dialogue, the show draws attention to growing disparities and impossibilities in
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15

Nassar, Maha. "The Marginal as Central: Al-Jadid and the Development of a Palestinian Public Sphere, 1953–1970." Middle East Journal of Culture and Communication 3, no. 3 (2010): 333–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/187398610x538687.

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AbstractThis article argues that throughout the 1950s and 1960s the communist-sponsored Arabic literary journal al-Jadid played a central role in creating a Palestinian-Arab counterpublic within Israel by challenging Zionist discourses and championing Arab and Palestinian causes. As a result, when Palestinian writers, activists and intellectuals in Israel were reconnected with Palestinians outside Israel after the 1967 War, they played a vital role in the development of a broader Palestinian public sphere that emphasized perseverance, ties to the land, and resistance to Zionist hegemony. rough
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16

Saʾdi, Ahmad H. "After the Catastrophe: A Reading of Manna’s Nakba and Survival." American Historical Review 125, no. 2 (2020): 571–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ahr/rhaa188.

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Abstract Adel Manna’s Nakba and Survival: The Story of the Palestinians Who Remained in Haifa and the Galilee, 1948–1956 appeared in Arabic and Hebrew 2016–2017. Manna’s book gives voice to the experience of the first generation of Palestinians living within the State of Israel. Here, four scholars of Palestinian and Israeli history review Nakba and Survival and weigh its importance for reckoning with the entangled history of the creation of Israel and the related dispossession of Palestinians during and after 1948.
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17

Adam, Hisham. "Formant frequency characteristics in Palestinian Arabic-speaking aphasics." Cognitive Linguistic Studies 1, no. 2 (2014): 313–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/cogls.1.2.07ada.

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The aim of this paper is to examine the acoustic characteristics of Arabic vowels as produced by Palestinian Arabic-speaking Broca’s aphasics compared to normal speakers. Five subjects diagnosed with Broca’s aphasia and five normal speakers residing in the West Bank participated in this study. The subjects produced 240 vowel tokens of the eight Arabic vowels (/i:/, /i/, /e:/, /a:/, /a/, /o:/, /u:/ and /u/,). The samples were analyzed using PRAAT and the formants F1 and F2 of the eight Arabic vowels were measured. F1 and F2 values were compared to the data in the literature. Comparisons among s
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18

Laks, Lior, Ibrahim Hamad, and Elinor Saiegh-Haddad. "Verbal patterns in Palestinian Arabic." Mental Lexicon 14, no. 2 (2019): 209–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/ml.00005.lak.

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Abstract The study examines the distribution of verbal patterns and their semantic-syntactic functions as they are used in spoken narrative text production by adult native speakers of Palestinian Arabic. 30 native Palestinian Arabic adult speakers from Kufur Qareʕ, a village in Central Israel, were shown a clip demonstrating conflicts and were asked to produce an oral narrative text based on it. The verbs used in these narratives were examined according to root, pattern, transitivity and semantic class. The results revealed strong tendencies with regard to the distribution of the patterns that
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19

Abu-Salim, Issam M. "Vowel shortening in Palestinian Arabic." Lingua 68, no. 2-3 (1986): 223–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0024-3841(86)90005-7.

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20

Bashkin, Orit. "Solidarity in the Galilee." American Historical Review 125, no. 2 (2020): 554–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ahr/rhaa158.

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Abstract Adel Manna’s Nakba and Survival: The Story of the Palestinians Who Remained in Haifa and the Galilee, 1948–1956 appeared in Arabic and Hebrew in 2016–2017. Manna’s book gives voice to the experience of the first generation of Palestinians living within the State of Israel. Here, four scholars of Palestinian and Israeli history review Nakba and Survival and weigh its importance for reckoning with the entangled history of the creation of Israel and the related dispossession of Palestinians during and after 1948.
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21

Dallasheh, Leena. "Surviving the Nakba: On Palestinians’ Political Possibilities and Limitations in 1948." American Historical Review 125, no. 2 (2020): 564–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ahr/rhaa182.

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Abstract Adel Manna’s Nakba and Survival: The Story of the Palestinians Who Remained in Haifa and the Galilee, 1948–1956 appeared in Arabic and Hebrew in 2016–2017. Manna’s book gives voice to the experience of the first generation of Palestinians living within the State of Israel. Here, four scholars of Palestinian and Israeli history review Nakba and Survival and weigh its importance for reckoning with the entangled history of the creation of Israel and the related dispossession of Palestinians during and after 1948.
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22

Elhija, Duaa Abu. "Hebrew Loanwords in the Palestinian Israeli Variety of Arabic (Facebook Data)." Journal of Language Contact 10, no. 3 (2017): 422–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/19552629-01002009.

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This research examines borrowings from Hebrew into Arabic as used by Nazarene and Iksali 1 Palestinian Israelis in the context of Arabic computer-mediated communication (cmc), specifically the written colloquial Palestinian Israeli dialect of Arabic in Facebook. The study focuses on the frequency of the borrowed items, phonological adaptation, and the reasons for borrowing from Hebrew. Three hypotheses are investigated: First, the most frequent borrowed items are nouns. Second, borrowed items are adapted to the Arabic phonological system. Finally, the main reasons for borrowing are to introduc
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Adam, Hisham. "Morphosyntactic aspects of agrammatism in Palestinian Arabic: Findings from a Semitic language." Revista de Investigación en Logopedia 13, no. 2 (2023): e85225. http://dx.doi.org/10.5209/rlog.85225.

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The present study uses a spontaneous speech task to investigate the production of morphosyntactic elements in Palestinian Arabic agrammatism (PA). Eight Palestinian-Arabic-speaking individuals with agrammatism (6 males and 2 females), diagnosed with mild to severe Broca’s aphasia, and 8 age- and gender-matched healthy speakers participated in the study. A speech sample of 100 words from each participant was transcribed and analyzed. Findings showed that substitutions, omissions, simplified sentence structure, and tense inflection errors mostly characterized Palestinian Arabic agrammatism. As f
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Faust, Noam. "The apophonic chain and the form of weak and strong verbs in Palestinian Arabic." Linguistic Review 34, no. 1 (2019): 83–121. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/tlr-2016-0006.

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AbstractThis paper explores the logic behind the various morpho-phonological subdivisions in the verbal system of Palestinian Arabic. It argues for the importance in the understanding of Palestinian Arabic of the apophonic chain proposed for Classical Arabic in Guerssel and Lowenstamm (1993). In Palestinian, it is first argued, the Measure 1 perfective template includes a hard-wired association of its two vocalic positions; the main differences in vocalization between the Palestinian and Classic varieties follow from this fact. The account is then extended to include three large subclasses of
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Laks, Lior. "Passive formation in Palestinian and Standard Arabic: Lexical vs. syntactic operations." Word Structure 6, no. 2 (2013): 156–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/word.2013.0043.

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This study compares the formation of passive verbs in Modern Standard Arabic and Palestinian Arabic. It examines the morphological differences between the two types of verb formation, arguing that they result from the component of the grammar where passivization takes place, the lexicon and the syntax. It addition, the paper examines gaps in passive formation in Palestinian Arabic showing that these gaps are not always accidental but can be explained by morphological criteria and can be accounted for only in a word based view.
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Sonn, Tamara. "Bandali Al-Jawzi's Min Tārīkh Al-Harakāt al-Fikriyyat Fi'l-Islām: The First Marxist Interpretation of Islam." International Journal of Middle East Studies 17, no. 1 (1985): 89–107. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0020743800028786.

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Bandali al-Jawzi (1871–1943) has been regaining popularity recently, particularly among his native Palestinians and Muslim nationalists of his adopted home, the Soviet Union. In 1977, for instance, the Union of Palestinian Journalists and Writers, in cooperation with the Oriental Institute of the Soviet Academy of Sciences, commemorated Jawzi as an outstanding Palestinian author. At that time a collection of various of his articles on the Arabic language and history was published in Beirut, as well as an edition of his only book, Min Tārīkh al-Harakāt al-Fikriyyat fi'l-Islām (The History of In
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ALZBOUN, Ghadeer. "THE ROLE OF LITERARY TEXTS OF 12TH GRADE ARABIC LANGUAGE BOOK IN ENHANCING THE PALESTINIAN NOVEL THROUGH FOCUSING ON THE CONCEPT OF PLACE THE MANIFESTATION OF PLACE- ANALYTICAL DESCRIPTIVE APPROACH." International Journal of Humanities and Educational Research 05, no. 04 (2023): 137–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.47832/2757-5403.21.9.

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The Palestinian Place is the first product of the Palestinian’s national and cultural identity’s components. It’s not a matter of a linguistic or geographical significance only, but it also exceeds to form an intellectual system for man. This research is based on the analysis of the dialectic of Place - of some literary texts in 12th Grade Arabic Language book1- and its manifestation in enhancing the Palestinian novel. And because this literature focuses on self-affirmation: to be or not to be concept, it was written in an aggressive environment controlled by repression, deterrence and oppress
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Uziel-Karl, Sigal, Fadi Kanaan, Rachel Yifat, Irit Meir, Netta Abugov, and Dorit Ravid. "Hebrew and Palestinian Arabic in Israel." Topics in Language Disorders 34, no. 2 (2014): 133–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/tld.0000000000000013.

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Rabbani, Mouin. "Between Hamas and the PA: An Interview with Islamic Jihad’s Khalid al-Batsh." Journal of Palestine Studies 42, no. 2 (2013): 61–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/jps.2013.42.2.61.

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Khalid al-Batsh, a senior official of Palestinian Islamic Jihad and the Gaza chair of the “Freedom Committee,” established under the Fatah-Hamas reconciliation agreement of May 2011, was interviewed in Cairo by Mouin Rabbani on 11 July 2012. The interview from which the following excerpts were taken covered a range of issues, including the impact of the “Arab Spring” on the Palestinians, the situations in Egypt and Syria, Islamic Jihad’s relations with Fatah and Hamas, and prospects for reform of the Palestinian Authority and the Palestine Liberation Organization. The excerpts below directly c
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30

Al Areqi, Rashad Mohammed Moqbel. "Reshaping Indigenous Identity of Palestinian People/Place." Advances in Language and Literary Studies 9, no. 6 (2018): 133. http://dx.doi.org/10.7575/aiac.alls.v.9n.6p.133.

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Palestinian narrative comes to reflect the reality of a nation under dislocation, Diaspora, and reshaping the indigenous identity. The Palestinian narratives always attempt to show part of the Palestinian suffering and struggling under the Israeli occupation. This study traces the life of a family, it is Abulheja’s during three generations as presented by Susan Abulhawa’s “While the World Sleeps” as the title of Arabic version, and it has other versions in English entitled ‘Mornings in Jenin’ or ‘Scar of David’, (2006). The study addresses the postcolonial concepts of dislocation, Diaspora, ex
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Green, Rachel. "Empathy in Post-Oslo Palestinian Literature: Reading between Identification and Recognition in Ala Hlehel’s Au Revoir Acre and Ibtisam Azem’s The Book of Disappearance." Comparative Literature 76, no. 1 (2024): 65–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/00104124-10897120.

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Abstract This article considers Ala Hlehel’s Au Revoir Acre and Ibtisam Azem’s The Book of Disappearance, two Arabic-language novels published in 2014 by Palestinian authors with Israeli citizenship. It argues that both texts thematize empathy, despite its familiar pitfalls, as central to their imaginings of an inclusive political future in Israel/Palestine in the post-Oslo era. In revivifying eighteenth-century Acre and the city’s triumphant defeat of Napoleon in 1799, Hlehel’s creatively embellished historical novel curates an effortless cascade of emotionally contagious intergroup identific
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Zahoor Hussain, Samiullah Khan, and Muhammad Ajmal. "A Corpus Stylistic Analysis of Abulhawa's the Blue between Sky and Water." Research Journal of Social Sciences and Economics Review (RJSSER) 1, no. 4 (2020): 83–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.36902/rjsser-vol1-iss4-2020(83-93).

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Palestinian literature received significance after Nakba (1948 Palestine-Israel war) and Naksa (1967 Arab-Israel war) and it laid an impact on Palestinian writers and there emerged a new form of literature called Palestinian American literature which got recognition in the 1990s internationally. After Nakba and Naksa many Palestinian families migrated to America. These Palestinians wrote literature in English that is called Palestinian-American literature. The aim of the stylistic analysis of Abulhawa's work to trace out how the writer constructs reality through lexical categories. This thesis
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Hamamra, Bilal, Ahmad Qabaha, and Sondos Qinnab. "“Words, Words, Words”: Mourid Barghouti’s Appropriation of Shakespeare’s Hamlet in I Saw Ramallah." Anglia 141, no. 3 (2023): 391–406. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/ang-2023-0026.

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Abstract This article examines Mourid Barghouti’s appropriation of Shakespeare’s Hamlet (1603) in his memoir I Saw Ramallah published originally in Arabic in 1997 and translated into English in 2000. The memoir documents his temporary return to Palestine after 30 years of exile and his criticism of the delusional life of Palestinians post Oslo accords which, as he argues, undermined the rights of Palestinians for autonomy, sovereignty and self-determination. Barghouti associates post-Oslo Palestinians with the fictional figure of Hamlet who is unpacking his heart with words rather than taking
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Basha, Sami, Denise Drane, and Gregory Light. "Adapting the Critical Thinking Assessment Test for Palestinian Universities." Journal of Education and Learning 5, no. 2 (2016): 60. http://dx.doi.org/10.5539/jel.v5n2p60.

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<p>Critical thinking is a key learning outcome for Palestinian students. However, there are no validated critical thinking tests in Arabic. Suitability of the US developed Critical Thinking Assessment Test (CAT) for use in Palestine was assessed. The test was piloted with university students in English (n=30) and 4 questions were piloted in Arabic (n=48). Students responded favorably. Scores were comparable with US scores. Only two students found the content problematic. One-hundred-twelve Palestinian faculty reviewed the skills tested by the CAT. There was moderate agreement that they r
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Kraver, Stephanie. "Palestine, Futurity, and the Rithāʾ: A Poetics of Speculation and Proleptic Mourning". Journal of Arabic Literature 55, № 1 (2024): 57–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/1570064x-12341506.

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Abstract This paper explores Fadwā Ṭūqān’s and Maḥmūd Darwīsh’s poetry written in the wake of the 1967 June War, the Israeli siege of Beirut in 1982, and the Second Intifāḍah (uprising) in 2002. Specifically, the article investigates how the poets mobilize the Arabic elegiac (rithāʾ) genre, as well as pre-Islamic and early Islamic poetic traditions, in order to contemplate the future and foster a mode of proleptic mourning. This paper asserts that these two Palestinian poets utilize the longstanding elegiac form in Arabic literary heritage to not only summon and lament past events and atrociti
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Colla, Elliott. "Revisiting the Question of the Novel/Nation." Journal of Palestine Studies 46, no. 2 (2017): 76–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/jps.2017.46.2.76.

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In this essay, Arabic literature specialist and Arabic-English translator Elliott Colla explores the relationship between the novel and the nation, and reviews Bashir Abu-Manneh's ambitious and original contribution to the study of Palestinian literature.
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England, Samuel. "After Nostalgia: Revisiting Palestine’s Poetics of al-Andalus." Journal of Arabic Literature 55, no. 1 (2024): 3–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/1570064x-12341505.

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Abstract During the past thirty years, scholars of Arab cultural politics have struggled to articulate modern Palestinians’ unique ways of viewing the medieval past. Al-Andalus in particular fascinates authors and visual artists of Palestine. Our current theoretical framework within Arabic literature is poorly adapted to the sweeping historiography that these authors and artists create. This article revises the academic consensus that nostalgia is the organizing principle for Palestinian expressions of Andalusi identity. It provides a new way to understand the relationship between modern Pales
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Laks, Lior. "Verb innovation in Hebrew and Palestinian Arabic." Brill’s Journal of Afroasiatic Languages and Linguistics 10, no. 2 (2018): 238–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/18776930-01002003.

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Abstract This study investigates the criteria for form selection in the formation of new verbs in Modern Hebrew and Palestinian Arabic. The verbal systems of these languages consist of templatic forms (binyanim, sg. binyan), where every verb that enters the language must conform to one of them. Some binyanim are not used at all for the formation of new verbs, while others are used quite rarely. The paper is based on productions of new verbs that have been collected during the past six years. It is shown that the interaction of thematic-semantic and morpho-phonological criteria dictates the sel
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Ahmad Abdel-Fattah, Mahmoud. "Arabic-Hebrew Language-Switching and Cultural Identity." International Journal of Arabic-English Studies 12, no. 1 (2011): 183–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.33806/ijaes2000.12.1.11.

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The phenomenon of Arabic-Hebrew language-switching is increasingly prevalent among the Palestinian Arabs in “Israel”. This is a preliminary investigative study of Arabic-Hebrew language-switching which deals with the analysis of randomly selected pieces of discourse collected, for the purpose of the study, from various sectors of the Palestinian Arab population. The paper includes three main sections in which an attempt is made to answer the following three questions: (i) which parts of the community use language-switching distinctively in their everyday communication, (ii) what is the nature
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AlAsttal, Tasnim. "The Role of Dialect in Shaping Palestinian National Identity." International Journal of Linguistics, Literature and Translation 8, no. 7 (2025): 31–36. https://doi.org/10.32996/ijllt.2025.8.7.4.

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This study examines the important role of the Palestinian Arabic dialect in the development and maintenance of Palestinian national identity. The research, situated within a qualitative, interpretive framework, analyzes linguistic characteristics, cultural expressions, and media products to comprehend how dialect serves as a symbol of resistance, unity, and historical continuity. The study illustrates, through thematic and contextual investigations of literary texts, musical lyrics, oral traditions, and cinematic works, that the Palestinian dialect functions as both a medium of communication a
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B. Almalki, Salma. "The Resistance Narrative in Arabic Science Fiction: Azem’s The Book of Disappearance (2014)." Arab World English Journal For Translation and Literary Studies 8, no. 1 (2024): 159–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.24093/awejtls/vol8no1.12.

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This paper aims to analyze the mode of resistance narrative in Ibtisam Azem’s The Book of Disappearance (2014), which is read within the frame of Arabic Science Fiction. The study answers the following questions:(1) What are the Arabic Science Fiction tropes in Azem’s novel? (2) How does ASF subserve resistance narratives in Azem’s novel? (3)Why does Azem utilize the Dystopian Narrative for resistance narratives? The study examines the structure and themes of Azem’s The Book of Disappearance in terms of postcolonial and science fictional theories. The study’s methodology considers Kanafani’s r
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Suparno, Darsita, Santje Inneke Iroth, Syifa Fauzia Chairul, and Muhammad Azwar. "Comparative Basic-Words of Standard Arabic Palestinian and Tunisian." Insaniyat: Journal of Islam and Humanities 4, no. 2 (2020): 103–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.15408/insaniyat.v4i2.14509.

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This paper studies comparative linguistics on the process of word-formation that occurs in Modern Standard Arabic (MSA), Palestinian Arabic (PLS), and Tunisian Arabic (TNS). It is addressed to portray the process of the verb, adjective, and noun formation in three Arabic languages by using Plag’s theory and to identify sameness and contrariness of basic words by using Hock’s theory. This study used 220 of Morris Swadesh's basic vocabulary as the main guidelines for obtaining data. The criteria were adopted to analyze the data were orthographic, sound-change, phonological and morpheme contrast.
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Nassar, Maha. "Palestinian Engagement with the Black Freedom Movement prior to 1967." Journal of Palestine Studies 48, no. 4 (2019): 17–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/jps.2019.48.4.17.

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This article examines early Palestinian engagements with multiple facets of the Black American struggle for freedom through a content analysis of influential Palestinian press outlets in Arabic prior to 1967. It argues that, since the 1930s, Palestinian intellectuals with strong anti-colonial views linked anti-Black racism in the United States to larger imperial and Cold War dynamics, and that they connected Black American mobilizations against racism to decolonization movements around the world. This article also examines Mahmoud Darwish's early analytical writings on race as a social constru
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Shehab, Ekrema, Abdelkarim Daragmeh, and Iman Rayyan. "The translation of Palestinian prisoners’ cryptic security Arabic terms into English." Babel. Revue internationale de la traduction / International Journal of Translation 65, no. 5 (2019): 648–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/babel.00120.she.

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Abstract This study deals with the translation into English of nine cryptic security Arabic terms Palestinian prisoners have nomenclatured in response to the life conditions in Israeli prisons. These terms were collected from prison literature and through interviews with five newly-freed Palestinian prisoners who served long terms in Israeli jails. The terms’ functions are pragmatically explicated, and suitable translations, capturing their pragmatic imports, are offered. The study found that these terms have drifted from their original semantic usages and acquired new functions prompted by Pa
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Treiger, Alexander. "Unpublished Texts from the Arab Orthodox Tradition (3): The Paterikon of the Palestinian Lavra of Mar Chariton." Chronos 38 (January 24, 2019): 7–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.31377/chr.v38i0.343.

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The third instalment in the “Unpublished Texts from the Arab Orthodox Tradition” series makes accessible a neglected document from the Orthodox Christian tradition in Arabic: the Paterikon of the Palestinian lavra of Mar Chariton. It includes an edition and an English translation of this text, which contains precious information about seven little-known ascetic fathers of this celebrated Palestinian monastery. Special attention is given to the ninth-century saint Eustratius of Mar Chariton, whose memory the Orthodox Church kept on 17 October. The Appendix includes an edition and an English tra
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Grant, Leigh H., Alexandra Shahwan, Ifat Maoz, and Boaz Keysar. "The influence of accent on the evaluation of trust-building efforts during conflict." PLOS ONE 19, no. 11 (2024): e0311373. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0311373.

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The Israeli-Palestinian conflict has been an ongoing source of violence in the Middle East, claiming the lives of tens of thousands of people. As of late violence has escalated, with this year being one of the deadliest years in the conflict in decades. Therefore, now more than ever finding ways to bridge divides is essential to reduce the human suffering associated with the conflict. In this study we evaluated the impact of an important element of communication: accent. We demonstrate that the accent through which trust-building initiatives are communicated can inadvertently sway public opini
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Fassberg, Steven E. "Jewish Palestinian Aramaic: Chronology, Geography, and Typology." Aramaic Studies 19, no. 1 (2021): 5–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/17455227-bja10015.

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Abstract Jewish Palestinian Aramaic was the language of the Jews of Palestine and is identifiable from around the third or fourth centuries CE until the last centuries of the first millennium, by which time it was completely displaced in speech by Arabic. This article surveys its origins and subsequent stages of development, chronologically from Palestinian Targumic to Palestinian Talmudic to Late Jewish Literary Aramaic. Geonic and post-Geonic scribes were not kind to manuscripts written in Jewish Palestinian Aramaic since they did not know the language and were influenced by the more prestig
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Shachmon, Ori, and Michal Marmorstein. "The Introductive Baka/Bāki in Rural Palestinian Arabic." Journal of Semitic Studies 66, no. 1 (2021): 185–214. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jss/fgaa042.

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Abstract The article explores the structure and use of the existential verb baka in Rural Palestinian Arabic for the introduction of orientation sections and fragments in narrative discourse. In clause-initial position the existential verb presents a non-inflecting form, either the 3MSG perfect baka or the MSG active participle bāki. We argue that the noninflectability of baka and bāki is indicative of their syntactic detached-ness from the following unit and is explained by their discourse-disjunctive function. We show that the existential baka/bāki serves to introduce both narrative-initial
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Abu-Salim, Issam M. "Vowel harmony in Palestinian Arabic: a metrical perspective." Journal of Linguistics 23, no. 1 (1987): 1–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022226700011014.

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Previous work on vowel harmony (VH) in Palestinian Arabic (PA), particularly Kenstowicz (1981), has shown that this process is more adequately expressed in autosegmental than in linear terms, since the former permits the two otherwise uncollapsible regressive and progressive harmony processes to be stated in a single unified rule. The present study complements that autosegmental analysis. It shows that the autosegmental rule of VH in PA is constrained simultaneously by metrical and segmental boundaries. That is, high front vowels acquire the feature [+round] only if they are dominated by a foo
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Ravid, Dorit, and Rola Farah. "Learning about noun plurals in early Palestinian Arabic." First Language 19, no. 56 (1999): 187–206. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/014272379901905603.

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