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How did the Israeli military learn to cope with the ubiquity of
media technologies that routinely document their power abuses? Why
did they re-appropriate these to tighten their grip on Palestinian
civilians? This book explains why a high-tech nation with advanced
military technologies came to rely on the everyday media habits
performed by soldiers and civilians. Daniel Mann argues that the
intensification of the security regime in Palestine, and the
increasingly personal use of media technologies by both soldiers
and civilians, are deeply entangled. The book traces how, beginning
in the 1990s, the integration of media into the lives of civilians
and Israeli soldiers enabled Israel to transfer responsibilities to
individual users, who in turn became legally and ethically liable
for state abuses of power. Drawing on declassified documents, found
footage, and social media, Mann shows how both media and warfare
have been remodelled around the figure of the defensive, isolated,
and insular 'individual'. Mann suggests that the focus on
representations and their close visual analysis paradoxically
hinders our ability to understand media. Instead of zooming into
fine details, we must step back to reveal the assemblage of images,
users, and infrastructure that together serve to maintain the
racial, legal and aesthetic divide between Israel and Palestine.
How did the Israeli military learn to cope with the ubiquity of
media technologies that routinely document their power abuses? Why
did they re-appropriate these to tighten their grip on Palestinian
civilians? This book explains why a high-tech nation with advanced
military technologies came to rely on the everyday media habits
performed by soldiers and civilians. Daniel Mann argues that the
intensification of the security regime in Palestine, and the
increasingly personal use of media technologies by both soldiers
and civilians, are deeply entangled. The book traces how, beginning
in the 1990s, the integration of media into the lives of civilians
and Israeli soldiers enabled Israel to transfer responsibilities to
individual users, who in turn became legally and ethically liable
for state abuses of power. Drawing on declassified documents, found
footage, and social media, Mann shows how both media and warfare
have been remodelled around the figure of the defensive, isolated,
and insular ‘individual’. Mann suggests that the focus on
representations and their close visual analysis paradoxically
hinders our ability to understand media. Instead of zooming into
fine details, we must step back to reveal the assemblage of images,
users, and infrastructure that together serve to maintain the
racial, legal and aesthetic divide between Israel and Palestine.
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