The last decade has marked the growing visibility and worldwide
interest in Israeli cinema. Films such as Walk on Water, Or, My
Treasure, Beaufort and Waltz with Bashir have been commercially and
critically successful both in Europe and the United States and have
won a number of prestigious international awards. This book
examines for the first time the new ideological and aesthetic
trends in contemporary Israeli cinema. More specifically, it
critically explores the complex and crucial role of Israeli cinema
in remembering and restaging traumas and losses that were denied
entry into the shared national past.
One of the most striking phenomena in contemporary Israeli
cinema is the number and scope of films dealing with past traumatic
events ? events that were repressed or insufficiently mourned, such
as the memory of the Holocaust, traumas from wars and terrorist
attacks, and the losses entailed by the experience of immigration.
Current Israeli cinema exposes and highlights a radical
discontinuity between history and memory. Traumatic events from
Israeli society's past are represented as the private memory of
distinct social groups ? soldiers, immigrants, women, queers ? and
not as collective memory, as a lived and practiced tradition that
conditions Israeli society. This detachment from national
collective memory pulls the films into a world marked by a
persistent blurring of the historical context and by private and
subjective impressions ? a timeless world of dreams, hallucinations
and myths. These groups feel duty-bound to remember the past,
recasting repressed memories through the cinema in order to return
and to give meaning to their identity.
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