Resistance 101: Palestine and the Global Awakening Masterclass
Can you use the master's tools to dismantle the master's house? Or is the house so structurally rotten that the only honest option is to walk out and build something entirely different? This episode maps the seismic intellectual tension between two giants of Palestinian thought — and the question that runs beneath everything this series will build: 1. Edward Said — secular exile, Columbia professor, author of Orientalism. He took Vico, Gramsci, and Foucault and turned them against the West that produced them. He fought for a seat at the table. 2. Wael Hallaq — Arguably the world's leading scholar of Islamic law. He argues the table itself is morally bankrupt. His book is called The Impossible State — and he means it literally. TIMELINE 1844 — Giambattista Vico's principle: men make their own history. Said will weaponise this a century later: you didn't discover the Orient. You invented it.1935 — Antonio Gramsci dies in a fascist prison. His concept of cultural hegemony — control through consent, not just force — becomes one of Said's core tools.1978 — Edward Said publishes Orientalism. The book transforms postcolonial studies permanently.2013 — Wael Hallaq publishes The Impossible State. Five structural properties of the modern state — each incompatible with Islamic governance. The concept of an "Islamic state" is an oxymoron. KEY TERMS Orientalism — The system by which the West invented "the East" as an object of study, fascination, and most importantly: control. Not a neutral academic field — an act of geopolitical power. Contrapuntal Reading — Said's method. Reading a text with one eye on the metropolitan centre and the other on the colonial periphery. What does the novel's country estate depend on that the novel never mentions? The Impossible State — Hallaq's thesis. The modern nation-state is built on assumptions — legal positivism, territorial sovereignty, the separation of facts from values — that are structurally incompatible with pre-modern Islamic governance. Legal Positivism — The idea that law does not need to be moral. It only needs to be law. Hallaq contrasts this with Sharia as a moral-social logic that refuses to separate the legal from the ethical. Horizontal Resistance — Said's mode. Fight for rights and recognition within the existing world order. Demand a seat at the table. Vertical Resistance — Hallaq's mode. The table is rotten. Build a different one from different foundations. Fitra — The innate human disposition toward truth. The epistemological ground of the entire series. The tension between Said and Hallaq is, at root, a question the Fitra already knows the answer to: you need both the stone and the blueprint. Resistance 101: Palestine and the Global Awakening Masterclass
4 episodes
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