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  • 1
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2023
    Titel der Quelle: Imagined Israel(s)
    Angaben zur Quelle: (2023) 204-227
    Keywords: Hare, David, ; Churchill, Caryl. ; Rotman, B. ; Viner, Katharine. ; Rickman, Alan. ; Theater History 21st century ; English drama History and criticism ; Arab-Israeli conflict Literature and the conflict ; Antisemitism History 21st century ; Israel In literature
    Abstract: In 2017, a British online magazine asked why, with regard to Israel, “British theatre can only produce shrill agitprop.” It answered that “British theatres think it is better to be self-righteous than carefully to explore both sides of complex conflicts.” In recent years, the arts in the United Kingdom have suffered from outbursts of anti-Israel action: a visit by Habima was canceled in 2012, and in 2011 a concert given in London by the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra was disrupted by anti-Israel protests. Over the past 20 years, there have been a number of British plays attacking Israel. This led to a headline in a Jewish magazine: “British Theatre Has an Enemy and Its Name Is Israel.” While this is exaggerated, there have been instances of anti-Israel judgment in British plays such as Perdition, My Name Is Rachel Corrie, Alive from Palestine: Stories under the Occupation, and Seven Jewish Children: A Play for Gaza. Criticism of any national entity is legitimate if it is well reasoned. The question I ask in this chapter is whether three of these plays, My Name Is Rachel Corrie by Katharine Viner and Alan Rickman, Seven Jewish Children by Caryl Churchill, and David Hare’s Via Dolorosa present well-reasoned arguments or whether they can be classified as shrill anti-Israel agitprop. I also consider The Holy Rosenbergs, a play by the British Jewish playwright Ryan Craig, as representing a Jewish view of the Israel-Palestine conflict.
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  • 2
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2022
    Titel der Quelle: Israel Affairs
    Angaben zur Quelle: 28,5 (2022) 706-723
    Keywords: World War, 1914-1918 Refugees ; World War, 1914-1918 Personal narratives, Jewish ; Jews History 1517-1917, Ottoman period ; Deportation History 20th century ; Eretz Israel History, Military 20th century ; Tel Aviv-Yafo (Israel) History, Military 20th century
    Abstract: Ahmed Djemal Pasha, Military Governor of the Levant during World War I, instigated two major deportations of Jews from Jaffa during the course of the war, and numerous lesser ones. On 17 December 1914, a day that came to be known as ‘Black Thursday’, the Ottoman ruler of Jaffa, under Djemal’s command, ordered the mass deportation of ‘enemy subjects’, including 6,000 Russian-born Jewish residents of Jaffa. Over the course of the next three months, a few thousand more Russian-born Jews were expelled from Palestine or fled just ahead of the deportations. In total 11,277 Jews were exiled, leaving on various ships that took them from Jaffa to Alexandria. This article describes the ‘Black Thursday’ deportation based on testimonies of those who either witnessed it or were its victims, and briefly on the two works of documentary fiction that provide a rounded context for the many accounts.
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