This book provides the most comprehensive survey of contemporary Palestinian art to date. The development of contemporary practice, theory and criticism is understood as integral to the concomitant construction of Palestinian national identities. In particular the book explores the intricate relationship between art and nationalism in which the idea of origin plays an important and problematic role. The book deconstructs the existing narratives of the history of Palestinian art, which search for its origins in the 19th century, and argues that Palestinian contemporary art demonstrates pluralistic, politically and philosophically complex attitudes towards identity and nation that confound familiar narratives of origin and belonging.The book builds upon theories of art, nationalism and post-colonialism particularly in relation to the themes of fragmentation and dispersal. It takes the Arabic word for Diaspora Shatat (literally broken apart) as a central concern in contemporary understanding of Palestinian culture and develops it, along with Edward Said’s paradoxical formula of a ‘coherence of dispersal’ as the organising concept of the book. This aspect of contemporary Palestinian art is peculiarly suited to the conditions produced by the globalisation of art and we show how Palestinian artists, despite not having a state, have developed an international profile.
Professor Bashir Makhoul is Rector of Winchester Campus and Head of School at Winchester School of Art, University of Southampton. Dr Gordon Hon is Lecturer in Fine Art and Visual Culture at Winchester School of Art, University of Southampton.
List of IllustrationsPrefaceAcknowledgements1. IntroductionThe Problem of the Beginning2. The Problem of the OriginThe Empty CentreThe Wall3. Origin and DisasterChaos and the Open Mouth4. Jerusalem as the Navel and the Blind SpotThe City as HierophanyThe City as Wiki5. Inside the Line: Palestinians in Israel6. Al-Shataat: A Coherence of DispersionThe Shadow of the MapThe Cracked EarthContingency, Tactics and Strategic EssentialismThe Artist as Semblant7. Trailers and OpeningsBibliographyIndex
Reviews'A masterful performance of fairness and objectivity, combined with a passion for the subject that will make it the most important point of departure for all future writing on this subject.'Critical Inquiry