Velie, Alan,Salaita, Steven.2013-08-162013-08-162003http://hdl.handle.net/11244/558Through a comparative analysis of colonialism in the New World and Holy Land with attention to how politics influence literary production, I examine the process by which settler societies transform theological narratives into national histories to justify their occupation of foreign land. In particular, I analyze the similarities between rhetoric employed by early colonialists in North America and that employed by Zionist immigrants in Palestine. In doing so, I examine histories, theories, and literary depictions of colonialism and inter-ethnic dialectics. Having established this comparative analysis, I then develop it further through the textual criticism in the second half of the dissertation, where I discuss Anishinaabe authors Gerald Vizenor and Winona LaDuke and Palestinian authors Liyana Badr and Emile Habiby.v, 260 leaves :ÔΩ̜abibi, Imil Criticism and interpretation.Arabic literature Palestine History and criticism.Literature, Comparative.Vizenor, Gerald Robert, 1934- Criticism and interpretation.Literature, Middle Eastern.American literature Indian authors History and criticism.Literature, American.LaDuke, Winona Criticism and interpretation.Badr, Liyanah Criticism and interpretation.The Holy Land in transit: Colonialism and the quest for Canaan.Thesis