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[Commlist] New book: Reimagining the Promised Land: Israel and America in Post-war Hollywood Cinema
Fri Oct 09 16:47:55 GMT 2020
*/Reimagining the Promised Land: Israel and America in Post-war
Hollywood Cinema/***(Bloomsbury)
Rodney Wallis (University of New South Wales)
https://www.bloomsbury.com/us/reimagining-the-promised-land-9781501350832/
<https://www.bloomsbury.com/us/reimagining-the-promised-land-9781501350832/>
While Israel has seemingly been a minor presence in Hollywood cinema,
/Reimagining the Promised Land/ argues that there is a long history of
Hollywood deploying images of Israel as a means of articulating an
idealized notion of American national identity. This argument is
developed through readings of /The Ten Commandments/ (Cecil B. DeMille,
1956), /Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ/ (William Wyler, 1959), /Exodus
/(Otto Preminger, 1960), /Cast a Giant Shadow/ (Melville Shavelson,
1966), /Black Sunday/(John Frankenheimer, 1977), /The Delta
Force/ (Menahem Golan, 1986), and /Munich/ (Steven Spielberg, 2005). The
mobilization of Israel that pervades this eclectic group of films
effectively demonstrates one of the more surreptitious ways in which
Hollywood has historically constructed and circulated dominant notions
of American national identity. Moreover, in examining the most notable
Hollywood representations of the Jewish state, the book offers an
informed historical overview of the cultural forces that have
contributed to popular understandings within the United States of the
state of Israel, Israel's Arab neighbours, and also the Arab-Israeli
conflict.
**
_Table of Contents_Introduction: The United States and Israel: Parallel
Promised Lands
1. "God's Chosen People": America as Israel in the Fifties Cold War Epic
2. A New Frontier: The Birth of Israel as a Frontier Myth in /Exodus /(1960)
3. The Age of Interventionism: American Heroism in /Cast a Giant Shadow
/(1966)
4. Rise and Fall: Israel and America in Counterterrorist Cinema, 1977-1986
5. The "War on Terror" in /Munich/ (2005)
Conclusion
**
“In this original and insightful analysis, Rodney Wallis suggests that a
series of Hollywood films on Israel-some of them epics and others
less-may tell us more about American identity than about Israel itself.
By inverting our understanding of the “special
relationship,”/ Reimagining the Promised Land/ makes an important
contribution to film studies, cultural history, and the symbiotic
relationship between self-proclaimed “chosen peoples.”” – Walter L.
Hixson, author of Israel's Armor: The Israel Lobby and the First
Generation of the Palestine Conflict (2019)
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