The Zionist Movement, Israel, and Violence is an in-depth study that explores both historical and recent developments of colonial modernity. From a critical and normative perspective, the collaborative book decolonizes Zionism both theoretically and practically. By addressing themes such as violence, settler colonialism, terror, instrumental fabrication, and theopolitics, the study emphasizes the structuration of Zionism while rejecting its episodic or cyclical portrayal. It also critically examines the promises of decolonial and postcolonial approaches in the production of knowledge. Edited by Fadi Zatari and Selman Emre Gürbüz, the book’s overall goal is to understand the brutal and unjust power of Zionism and to create an intellectual space of resistance in support of Palestinian liberation.