"A wagon that could be placed on ready-made tracks"
This short book was initially a lecture and then a series of exchanges via blog posts and articles in Jacobin. Malm's main intervention is to argue that the link between the genocide in Gaza and the climate catastrophe comes into focus if we look to deep history. In 1840, Britain first used steam-powered ships for warfare, and it did so in Palestine and Lebanon. Malm argues that tracking this history demonstrates how colonialism and its extractive logics are tied to the climate crisis. Toward the end, he also makes some arguments about Hamas and its tactics of armed resistance. Most responses to his argument focused on these latter arguments and not on the historical research (which really is the bulk of the lecture essay). The end of the book offers some responses to the various critiques about Hamas.
The historical argument is detailed and worth a reader's attention: "But …
This short book was initially a lecture and then a series of exchanges via blog posts and articles in Jacobin. Malm's main intervention is to argue that the link between the genocide in Gaza and the climate catastrophe comes into focus if we look to deep history. In 1840, Britain first used steam-powered ships for warfare, and it did so in Palestine and Lebanon. Malm argues that tracking this history demonstrates how colonialism and its extractive logics are tied to the climate crisis. Toward the end, he also makes some arguments about Hamas and its tactics of armed resistance. Most responses to his argument focused on these latter arguments and not on the historical research (which really is the bulk of the lecture essay). The end of the book offers some responses to the various critiques about Hamas.
The historical argument is detailed and worth a reader's attention: "But when the Zionist movement was eventually assembled, it was a wagon that could be placed on ready-made tracks, laid out by the British Empire after 1840: the dominant classes of the metropole had already constructed the logic of its satellite colony in Palestine, if only as a mental image." (43)