Rutgers University Press

Search Our Website

free shipping

podcast

 
Navigation Menu











Beyond Flesh
Bookstore | Subject List | SUBJECT LIST: F - L (New Books Added Daily) | Gay and Lesbian Studies | Beyond Flesh

Beyond Flesh
Beyond Flesh

Price: $23.95 


Subtitle: Queer Masculinities and Nationalism in Israeli Cinema
Author: Raz Yosef
Subject: Film Studies/Gay and Lesbian Studies/Jewish Studies
Paper ISBN 0-8135-3376-7
Cloth ISBN 0-8135-3375-9
Pages: 224 pp. 22 b&w illus.
Description: A critique of the role of Israeli cinema in the construction of masculinities

Praise for Beyond Flesh

"This is a provocative and timely book, well-written and well-argued . . . a totally engrossing study."¾ Peter Lehman, author of Running Scared: Masculinity and the Representation of the Male Body

Raz Yosef explores Israeli cinemas role in the creation of national identity and the complex ways the marginalization of queerness became necessary to that goal.

Zionism was not only a political and ideological program but also a sexual one. The liberation of Jews and creation of a new nation were closely intertwined with a longing for the redemption and normalization of the Jewish male body. That body had to be rescued from anti-Semitic, scientific-medical discourse associating it with disease, madness, degeneracy, sexual perversity, and femininityeven with homosexuality. The Zionist movement was intent on transforming the very nature of European Jewish masculinity as it had existed in the diaspora. Zionist/Israeli films expressed this desire through visual and narrative tropes, enforcing the image of the hypermasculine, colonialist-explorer and militaristic nation-builder, an image dependent on the homophobic repudiation of the "feminine" within men.

The creation of a new heterosexual Jewish man was further intertwined with attitudes on the breeding of children, bodily hygiene, racial improvement, and Orientalist perspectiveswhich associated the East, and especially Eastern bodies, with unsanitary practices, plagues, disease, and sexual perversity. By stigmatizing Israels Eastern populations as agents of death and degeneration, Zionism created internal biologized enemies, against whom the Zionist society had to defend itself. In the name of securing the life and reproduction of the new Ashkenazi Jewry, Israeli society discriminated against both its internal enemies, the Palestinians, and its own citizens, the Mizrahim (Oriental Jews).

Yosefs critique of the construction of masculinities and queerness in Israeli cinema and culture also serves as a model for the investigation of the role of male sexuality within national culture in general.

Raz Yosef teaches in the film and television department at Tel Aviv University, Israel.


Receive special offers and book notices by email. Sign up for RU READING?
Price: $23.95 





It's safe to shop at Rutgers. Please, read our privacy and security statement.
Copyright and Disclaimer ©2007 Rutgers University Press. Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey