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Visioning Israel-Palestine: Encounters at the Cultural Boundaries of Conflict

Hardback

Main Details

Title Visioning Israel-Palestine: Encounters at the Cultural Boundaries of Conflict
Authors and Contributors      Edited by Dr Gil Pasternak
SeriesNew Encounters: Arts, Cultures, Concepts
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:336
Dimensions(mm): Height 234,Width 156
Category/GenreTheory of art
Art History
ISBN/Barcode 9781501364624
ClassificationsDewey:701.03
Audience
Tertiary Education (US: College)
Illustrations 47 bw illus

Publishing Details

Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Imprint Bloomsbury Visual Arts
Publication Date 23 July 2020
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

Visioning Israel-Palestine strives to cultivate recognition of the part that cultural products have played in the duplication of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. While this conflict is one of the longest-lasting struggles over land and human rights in recent history, politicians and the media have largely reduced it to a series of debates over historical facts and expressions of violence. Its persistence, however, has also led to the manufacture of cultural products that challenge understandings of the conflict as a fight between two distinct peoples unified against each other. The wide range of international contributors to the volume analyse the content of such products alongside the work that they do within Israel-Palestine and in the Jewish and Palestinian diasporas. Considering Israeli and Palestinian films, art installations, street exhibitions, photographs and oral histories, Visioning Israel-Palestine expands the conflict's historical imagination and nurtures suitable cultural conditions to revitalize the Israeli-Palestinian peace process.

Author Biography

Gil Pasternak is Reader in Social and Political Photographic Cultures in the Photographic History Research Centre (PHRC) at De Montfort University, United Kingdom. A member of the advisory board for the journals Photography & Culture and Jewish Film & New Media, earlier in life he worked as a photojournalist, photography archivist and fine art photographer.

Reviews

This rich volume introduces the inspiring neologism "visioning" to make the hyphen between Israel-Palestine a sign of bonding and correlation instead of its common perception as a sign of distance and separation. Chapter-by-chapter it brilliantly demonstrates Gil Pasternak's conviction that the arts matter to the future of Israelis and Palestinians - a conviction which I share. * Mieke Bal, University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands * This innovative volume draws on a wide range of aesthetic sources to show how cultural products can review and reframe the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. We can then see that visual art, broadly understood, not only engages past trauma but also opens up possibilities for a more peaceful future. * Roland Bleiker, University of Queensland, Australia * The title of this remarkable collection telegraphs its fundamental message. A hyphenated "state" (in the sense of an actual condition rather than a political entity) already exists in Israel, Gaza, and the West Bank. This state is a fragmented jigsaw puzzle of cooperation and conflict, inequality and co-presence that eludes all one-sided nationalist narratives, most notably the long-imagined "two state solution" which now belongs in the dustbin of history. Focusing on "cultural products" (images, texts, exhibitions, films, and stories), Visioning Israel-Palestine provides an account of contemporary experiences and encounters that promise to assemble this puzzle as a compellingly legible mosaic. * W. J. T. Mitchell, University of Chicago, USA * The refreshing premise of this volume is the recognition that there exists an interculturality within Israeli and Palestinian works of art based on the conflict they share. ... Visioning Israel-Palestine succeeds in making clear that art and culture will remain central in chipping away at the ossified dash that has bound 'Israel' and 'Palestine' in conflict for over half a century. * Burlington Contemporary *