
Itineraries in Conflict
Israelis, Palestinians, and the Political Lives of Tourism
- English
- PDF
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
Combining vivid ethnographic detail, postcolonial theory, and readings of Israeli and Palestinian popular texts, Stein considers a broad range of Israeli leisure cultures of the Oslo period with a focus on the Jewish desires for Arab things, landscapes, and people that regional diplomacy catalyzed. Moving beyond conventional accounts, she situates tourism within a broader field of "discrepant mobility," foregrounding the relationship between histories of mobility and immobility, leisure and exile, consumption and militarism. She contends that the study of Israeli tourism must open into broader interrogations of the Israeli occupation, the history of Palestinian dispossession, and Israel's future in the Arab Middle East. Itineraries in Conflict is both a cultural history of the Oslo process and a call to fellow scholars to rethink the contours of the Arab-Israeli conflict by considering the politics of popular culture in everyday Israeli and Palestinian lives.
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Information
Table of contents
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Itineraries and Intelligibilities
- 1. Regional Routes: Israeli Tourists in the New Middle East
- 2. Consumer Coexistence: Enjoying the Arabs Within
- 3. Scalar Fantasies: The Israeli State and the Production of Palestinian Space
- 4. Culinary Patriotism: Ethnic Restaurants and Melancholic Citizenship
- 5. Of Cafés and Terror
- Postscript: Osloâs Ghosts
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index