Israeli Cinema: East/West and the Politics of Representation, by Ella Shohat. New Edition. London and New York: I.B. Tauris, 2010. 377 pp. ?65.00. Ella Shohat's book, first published in 1989, is considered one of the best and most comprehensive books ever written on Israeli cinema and has been reprinted several times. Thousands of students in Israel and all over the world have used it as a textbook, and we may assume that thousands more will continue to do so. The new 2010 edition has updated the original five chapters and added a Postscript. Shohat's Israeli Cinema was ahead of its time. Its uniqueness lay in its inclusion of a long list of films made in Israel from the late nineteenth century- the early period of Zionist pioneering in the land of Israel-Palestine under the Ottoman Empire and later the British Mandate-through the early years of the State of Israel (founded 1948), to recent films. The title states that it connects three elements-East, West and the politics of representation, which on the surface are disparate. However, a deeper look shows that history, film, and ideology have always been tied to one another from the earliest days of film. We have seen obvious connections in German expressionist films following World War One, in French cinema which attempted to address reality through a surrealistic lens, and the most outstanding of all, Soviet cinema by Eisenstein and Pudovkin. In the United States as well, the Hollywood film industry had a capitalist-racist-ideological orientation intertwined with America's own history. Fiction has long been the major tool used in filmmakers' work to express nationalistic social emotions and thoughts, political ideas and outlooks. In this context, we can also include Israeli cinema as a comprehensive name given to Jewish cinema made prior to the establishment of the State of Israel, financed by agencies of the World Zionist Organization, and on to contemporary Israeli films. According to Shohat, the common denominator in Israeli films was the ideological hard core that lay at the center of Zionist society, which from the very beginning excluded foreigners. Shohat includes Palestinians, Arabs, and Jews who immigrated from Arab countries in her definition of foreigners, thus linking the fate of Jews with contemporary Palestinian Arabs, and considers them both victims of Zionism. Her ideology is reflected in her impressive analysis of the films on a case-by-case basis. She points an accusing finger at Zionism for using film as propaganda to express Zionist emotions and for taking a colonialist and racist attitude towards Jews as being different from the mainly Ashkenazi pioneers of predominately European origin. Shohat wrote her original book as an antithesis to a Zionism that did not recognize Israeli-Palestinian partnership for the new state. Her book was written before the 1990s when the Oslo Accords and peace talks began and before research trends in Israel began to focus on Mizrahim, and before Mizrahim started seeking their place in Israel's socio-political-cultural space through various social movements. It is important to read this book in the context of the period in which it was written, keeping in mind, however, that since then, water has flowed down the Jordan. Thanks to studies by Shohat and a persistent group of scholars, much new research was published which led to visible social and cultural change in Israel. The studies that came in their wake respond to claims of discrimination and show that there have been rapid and deep changes in the socioeconomic, social status, and culture of Jews and Arab Israelis over the past 20-30 years. For example, in contrast to the past, Israel's middle class is now mostly if not entirely made up of Jews. Today, a great many of the members of Israel's ruling party and leading public personalities are of origin. Since the 1980s there has also been a religious political party of Pure Mizrahi Israelis. …
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