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  1. ANITA SHAPIRA is a professor emerita at Tel Aviv University. An internationally acclaimed scholar with a special interest in social and cultural history, Shapira has published pathbreaking studies on the history of Zionism, Jewish-Arab relations, and the state of Israel.

  2. 26 de feb. de 2015 · Anita Shapira is a professor emerita at Tel Aviv University. An internationally acclaimed scholar, Shapira has published path-breaking studies on the history of Zionism, Jewish-Arab relations and the state of Israel.

  3. Shapira, A., 1 Jun 2022, In: American Historical Review. 127, 2, p. 1052-1053 2 p. Research output : Contribution to journal › Review article › peer-review Political history of Israel

  4. brandeisuniversitypress.com › title › israel-a-historyIsrael: A History

    8 de nov. de 2012 · Anita Shapira is a professor emerita at Tel Aviv University. An internationally acclaimed scholar with a special interest in social and cultural history, Shapira has published pathbreaking studies on the history of Zionism, Jewish-Arab relations, and the state of Israel.

  5. Anita Shapira is a professor in the Department of Jewish History at Tel Aviv University. Her research interests are: the history of Zionism; the social and political history of the Jewish community in Palestine; the Zionist labor movement; a biographical study of Berl Katznelson; cultural trends in Israeli and pre-Israeli society; Zionism and the use of force.

  6. Anita Shapira Hirbet Hizah Between Remembering and Forgetting Woe to the generation that has to commit the acts of “Hizah” and flees the pain of their recounting. —Ephraim Kleiman Memory—what, how, and when we remember—continues to fascinate scholars. It is elusive, complex, and difficult to define. Collective memory

  7. 6 de dic. de 2022 · According to Shapira, the shock of defeat and refugeeism “further inflamed the myth of the return, perpetuating the refugee problem” (p. 175 – 176). The Palestinian Arabs perceived “the 1948 war as an accident that would be swiftly rectified, since the demographic balance of power favored the Arab states and would enable them to triumph in the long term.