Television Drama in Israel: Identities in Post-TV Culture

Author:   Itay Harlap (Tel Aviv University, Israel)
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
ISBN:  

9781501328930


Pages:   224
Publication Date:   05 October 2017
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Television Drama in Israel: Identities in Post-TV Culture


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Overview

Israeli television, currently celebrating fifty years of broadcasting, has become one of the most important content sources on the international TV drama market, when serials such as Homeland, Hostages, Fauda, Zaguory Empire and In Treatment were bought by international networks, HBO included. Offering both a textual reading and discourse analysis of contemporary Israeli television dramas, Itay Harlap adopts a case study approach in order to address production, reception and technological developments in its accounts. His premise is that the meeting point between social trends within Israeli society (primarily the rise of opposition groups to the hegemony of the Zionist-Jewish-masculine-Ashkenazi ideologies) and major changes in the medium in Israel (which are comparable to international changes that have been titled ""post-TV""), led to the creation of television dramas characterized by controversial themes and complex narratives, which present identities in ways never seen before on television or in other Israeli mediums.

Full Product Details

Author:   Itay Harlap (Tel Aviv University, Israel)
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Imprint:   Bloomsbury Academic USA
Weight:   0.457kg
ISBN:  

9781501328930


ISBN 10:   150132893
Pages:   224
Publication Date:   05 October 2017
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

List of Figures Preface Acknowledgements 1. Half a Century of Israeli Identities Through Television Before Television Television Aleph (A), or the Period of Single-Channel Consensus Television Beit (B), or the Period of Channel 2’s Dominance Television Gimel (C) or Israeli Post-Television 2. Bringing Back the Nation: BeTipul’s Male Warrior Trauma, Zionism, and masculinity Dan Halutz and the trauma of the victimizer Menachem Yerushalmi and the working through of trauma Uri Kahana and the trauma of heterosexual masculinity 3. It’s Not TV, It’s BeTipul: Rethinking ‘Israeliness’ BeTipul: Text and context ‘BeTipul is symbolic of Israeli society’ ‘BeTipul is a controversial series’ ‘BeTipul is not regular television’ ‘BeTipul is produced by talented creators’ ‘BeTipul is psychologically profound’ Conclusion, or The Text Also Speaks 4. Bad Television/Good (Post) Television: Aging and Masculinity in Nevelot [Eagles] Old Age and the Bad Object Television as Bad Object Nevelot as Good Object 5. Small-Screen Trauma: Seriality and Post-Trauma in Parashat HaShavua and Waltz With Bashir Shaul the Dreamer Between Parashat HaShavua and Waltz With Bashir Second Season, Tenth Episode, Last Scene 6. ‘Black Box’: Memory, Television, and Ethnicity in Zaguri Imperia Twenty Years On: Sh’chur and Zaguri From ‘Dancers Dancing in the Snow’ to ‘Habibi Diali’ ‘All But the White Foam’: Television and Memory Conclusion, or ‘What’s the Moral of the Story?’ 7. The New Normative: Gay Fatherhood on Israeli Television From Criminals and ‘Sick People’ to Gay Fathers Normative Gay Parenting on Israeli Broadcast Television Ima VeAbbaz (Mom and Dads) 8. Conclusion and Some Observations on Israeli Reality TV References Television Film

Reviews

This is a stylishly written, readable and persuasive analysis of a selection of contemporary Israeli television that will be of considerable interest and value to students and researchers alike. One of the main strengths of the book is that it engages directly with programmes, via coherent and conceptually informed case studies that bring new material into the scholarly domain and combine close textual analysis with a discussion of Israeli society and culture. A second major strength of Dr Harlap's writing is that, although tightly focused on contemporary Israeli TV drama, he adopts critical, conceptual and theoretical frameworks that connect directly with the wider field of Television Studies: for example, `post-TV' - indeed, `post-Israel' -, cultural and psychological notions of trauma and the politics of representation. This book is an important contribution to the growing field of Israeli Television Studies, whilst several of the case studies - the chapter on representations of gay fatherhood, for example - pick up on representational and political issues that will resonate beyond Israel. * Stephen Lacey, Emeritus Professor of Drama, Film and Television, University of South Wales, Wales, UK * Television Drama in Israel is a brilliant study of the collapse of the Zionist ideal of the New Jew as it is represented in five Israeli TV dramas. Through an insightful analysis of both themes and structures, the book shows how the Jewish masculine, Ashkenazi heterosexual hero is replaced by repressed identities of Arab-Jews, LGBT, or an effeminate protagonist. Arguing that this transformation reflects, as well as effects, Israeli society's new Post-Zionist era, the book utilizes an intricate study of personal and collective traumas to impressively expose new perceptions of victims and of perpetrators as they are represented in Post-TV dramatic articulations. * Hannan Hever, Jacob and Hilda Blaustein Professor of Hebrew Language and Literature and Comparative Literature, Yale University, USA * Itay Harlap's book provides a fresh and detailed analysis on core themes in Israeli culture through what has until now been an under explored perspective- that of Israeli television productions. It is therefore an important and illuminating contribution to the fields of both Israel and Television Studies that researchers will find as a valuable text in their courses. * Nurith Gertz, Professor Emerita of Hebrew Literature and Film, The Open University of Israel, Israel *


This is a stylishly written, readable and persuasive analysis of a selection of contemporary Israeli television that will be of considerable interest and value to students and researchers alike. One of the main strengths of the book is that it engages directly with programmes, via coherent and conceptually informed case studies that bring new material into the scholarly domain and combine close textual analysis with a discussion of Israeli society and culture. A second major strength of Dr Harlap's writing is that, although tightly focused on contemporary Israeli TV drama, he adopts critical, conceptual and theoretical frameworks that connect directly with the wider field of Television Studies: for example, 'post-TV' - indeed, 'post-Israel' -, cultural and psychological notions of trauma and the politics of representation. This book is an important contribution to the growing field of Israeli Television Studies, whilst several of the case studies - the chapter on representations of gay fatherhood, for example - pick up on representational and political issues that will resonate beyond Israel. Stephen Lacey, Emeritus Professor of Drama, Film and Television, University of South Wales, Wales, UK


Author Information

Itay Harlap teaches television studies and film theory at Sapir Academic College, Israel, and at the The Steve Tisch School of Film and Television, Tel Aviv University, Israel. His articles have appeared in Jewish Film & New Media, Misgarot Media [in Hebrew], Mikan [in Hebrew], Critical Studies in Television, and GLQ, A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies. Harlap is among the founders and organizers of the “Fiktzia” annual conference on Israeli television studies.

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