Every system of domination tells a story - a story that makes inequality appear necessary, violence appear defensive, and injustice appear inevitable. Justifying the Unjustifiable is not a history of Israel-Palestine. It is an examination of how power justifies itself. Across eighteen tightly structured chapters, Maxim Fox analyzes the recurring mechanisms through which domination is normalized: history turned into entitlement, law turned into alibi, security turned into necessity, fear turned into logic, trauma turned into immunity, identity turned into hierarchy, and "no alternative" turned into inevitability.
Israel-Palestine is approached not as a singular or exceptional conflict, but as part of a broader global pattern - alongside comparisons to apartheid South Africa, French Algeria, and the post-9/11 security state. Rather than focusing on events or policy prescriptions, this book examines structure: how systems of power sustain themselves, how moral language is inverted, and how injustice comes to feel natural, stable, and unavoidable.
Written in a restrained, analytical voice, Justifying the Unjustifiable is intended for readers seeking to understand not only what is happening, but how it is made to appear acceptable. This is a book about Israel-Palestine. It is also a book about power everywhere.
Every system of domination tells a story - a story that makes inequality appear necessary, violence appear defensive, and injustice appear inevitable. Justifying the Unjustifiable is not a history of Israel-Palestine. It is an examination of how power justifies itself. Across eighteen tightly structured chapters, Maxim Fox analyzes the recurring mechanisms through which domination is normalized: history turned into entitlement, law turned into alibi, security turned into necessity, fear turned into logic, trauma turned into immunity, identity turned into hierarchy, and "no alternative" turned into inevitability.
Israel-Palestine is approached not as a singular or exceptional conflict, but as part of a broader global pattern - alongside comparisons to apartheid South Africa, French Algeria, and the post-9/11 security state. Rather than focusing on events or policy prescriptions, this book examines structure: how systems of power sustain themselves, how moral language is inverted, and how injustice comes to feel natural, stable, and unavoidable.
Written in a restrained, analytical voice, Justifying the Unjustifiable is intended for readers seeking to understand not only what is happening, but how it is made to appear acceptable. This is a book about Israel-Palestine. It is also a book about power everywhere.