Documentary Cinema in Israel-Palestine: Performance, the Body, the Home

Author:   Dr Shirly Bahar
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
ISBN:  

9781838606824


Pages:   248
Publication Date:   29 July 2021
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Our Price $190.00 Quantity:  
Add to Cart

Share |

Documentary Cinema in Israel-Palestine: Performance, the Body, the Home


Add your own review!

Overview

Full Product Details

Author:   Dr Shirly Bahar
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Imprint:   I.B. Tauris
Weight:   0.526kg
ISBN:  

9781838606824


ISBN 10:   1838606823
Pages:   248
Publication Date:   29 July 2021
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Tertiary & Higher Education
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

Introduction Part I: The Body 1. Jenin: Living with Martyrdom in Mohammad Bakri’s Jenin Jenin and Since You Left, and Juliano Mer-Hamis’ Arna’s Children 2. Heads Held High: Mizrahim’s Coming of Age and Activism in David Belhassen and Asher Hamies’ The Ringworm Children, David Benchetrit’s Kaddim Wind: A Moroccan Chronicle, and Nissim Mosek’s Have You Heard of the Black Panthers? Part II: Home 3. Speaking Out About the Places of Palestine in Israel in Rachel Leah Jones’ 500 Dunam on the Moon, Michel Khleifi and Eyal Sivan’s Route 181, and Ibtisaam Maraana’s Paradise Lost 4. A Mother Tongue, A Daughter’s Voice: Mizrahi Women’s Homecoming to the Arabic Language in Effi Banai’s Longing and Israela Shaer-Meoded’s Queen Khantarisha Concluding Notes: Looking Towards Mizrahi Solidarity with the Palestinian Struggle Bibliography

Reviews

Documentary Cinema in Israel-Palestine is a major contribution to understanding 21st-century transnational film history. Looking at key documentary films by Arab and Mizrahi filmmakers living within the contested borders of Israel-Palestine, Shirly Bahar develops an argument for the vital place of documentary within contemporary politics and identities. Deeply attuned to the process by which documentary invokes and provokes intimacies across various boundaries-filmmaker, subject, audience; spaces and places; languages; among them-Bahar makes a case for documentary as a philosophical, as much as visual and aural, form. Through close readings of several crucial films from the first decade of this century, Bahar expounds on the ways in which documentary, as witness to damaged bodies in devastated places, makes visible the ravages state violence wreaks on truth, language and landscape. Violence against Israeli and Palestinian Jews and Arabs (and Bahar makes clear that the simplistic dichotomy Israeli Jews/Palestinian Arabs is part of the erasure of history performed on these bodies and places since 1948) finds its way into the films by Arab and Mizrahi filmmakers through lenses focused on reenacting pain and retelling memory. Bahar's insights reveal how occupation and war, on a large scale, and naming, property, even home restoration, on a more personal level, are grasped within the varieties of encounters-at once awkward, hostile and intimate-made possible by documentary cinema. In this profound study, we see how documentary and its critics mediate a uniquely performative and affective politics in Israel-Palestine, but also elsewhere and everywhere. -- Paula Rabinowitz, University of Minnesota, USA


Author Information

Shirly Bahar teaches in the School of Visual Arts at Columbia University in New York, USA, and is the co-director of the Tzedek Lab network. She received her PhD from New York University's Hebrew and Judaic Studies Department.

Tab Content 6

Author Website:  

Customer Reviews

Recent Reviews

No review item found!

Add your own review!

Countries Available

All regions
Latest Reading Guide

MRG2025CC

 

Shopping Cart
Your cart is empty
Shopping cart
Mailing List