Laughter in Occupied Palestine
Comedy and Identity in Art and Film
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published:24th Feb '16
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Though the current political situation in Palestine is more serious than ever, contemporary Palestinian art and film is becoming, paradoxically, increasingly funny. Chrisoula Lionis argues that laughter comes as a response to political uncertainty and the decline in nationalist hope.
Though the current political situation in Palestine is more serious than ever, contemporary Palestinian art and film is becoming, paradoxically, increasingly funny.In Laughter in Occupied Palestine, Chrisoula Lionis analyses both the impetus behind this shift toward laughter and its consequences, arguing that laughter comes as a response to political uncertainty and the decline in nationalist hope. Revealing the crucial role of laughter in responding to the failure of the peace process and ongoing occupation, she unearths the potential of humour to facilitate understanding and empathy in a time of division. This is the first book to provide a combined overview of Palestinian art and film, showing the ways in which both art forms have developed in response to critical moments in Palestinian history over the last century. These key moments, Lionis argues, have radically transformed contemporary Palestinian collective identity and in turn Palestinian cultural output. Mapping these critical junctions - beginning with the Balfour Declaration of 1917 to the Oslo Accords in 1993 - she explores the historical trajectory of Palestinian art and film, and explains how to the failure of the peace process has led to the present proliferation of humour in Palestinian visual culture.
'Chrisoula Lionis succeeds in giving a panoramic and, at the same time, profound view of the field of humorology as a whole and of the relationship between humor and identity in particular. In applying her theoretical insights to the context of Palestinian culture and history gives a comprehensive, fair and objective account of what has happened to Palestine and the Palestinian people over the last hundred years. This book is a must-read for anyone interested in humor and/or the history of the Middle East conflict.' - Professor Sharif Kanaana, Department of Anthropology, Birzeit University and co-author of Speak Bird, Speak Again (1989); 'Lionis offers a marvellous introduction to the way Palestinian art and cinema reflect the shifting dynamics of Palestinian politics, giving us rare insight into the way humor has taken hold in the arts over the past two decades. Rich examples of the ways Palestinian artists brilliantly illuminate the absurdity of their conditions allow Lionis to reflect on how laughter in the face of trauma and political disappointment can actually sustain hope and solidarity.' -Lila Abu-Lughod, Joseph L. Buttenwieser Professor, Columbia University
ISBN: 9781784532888
Dimensions: 216mm x 138mm x 25mm
Weight: 437g
256 pages