Security and Suspicion: An Ethnography of Everyday Life in Israel


€31,00
Auteur Juliana Ochs
Taal ENG- Engels
Bindwijze Paperback
ISBN/EAN 9780812222661
Serie The Ethnography of Political Violence
Releasedatum 2013-06-13
Doelgroep Tieners en jongvolwassenen, Volwassenen, Volwassenen en jong volwassenen
Title: Default Title
Preis:
Sonderpreis€31,00

Security and Suspicion: An Ethnography of Everyday Life in Israel van Juliana Ochs is een Engelstalig gedrukt boek. Deze titel is geschikt voor studenten in het hoger onderwijs.

In Israel, gates, fences, and walls encircle public spaces while guards scrutinize, inspect, and interrogate. With a population constantly aware of the possibility of suicide bombings, Israel is defined by its culture of security. Security and Suspicion is a closely drawn ethnographic study of the way Israeli Jews experience security in their everyday lives. Observing security concerns through an anthropological lens, Juliana Ochs investigates the relationship between perceptions of danger and the political strategies of the state. Ochs argues that everyday security practices create exceptional states of civilian alertness that perpetuate-rather than mitigate-national fear and ongoing violence. In Israeli cities, customers entering gated urban cafEs open their handbags for armed security guards and parents circumnavigate feared neighborhoods to deliver their children safely to school. Suspicious objects appear to be everywhere, as Israelis internalize the state's vigilance for signs of potential suicide bombers. Fear and suspicion not only permeate political rhetoric, writes Ochs, but also condition how people see, the way they move, and the way they relate to Palestinians. Ochs reveals that in Israel everyday practices of security-in the home, on commutes to work, or in cafEs and restaurants-are as much a part of conflict as soldiers and military checkpoints. Based on intensive fieldwork in Israel during the second intifada, Security and Suspicion charts a new approach to issues of security while contributing to our appreciation of the subtle dynamics of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Based on intensive fieldwork in Israel during the second intifada, this ethnographic study explores how Israeli Jews experience security in their everyday lives. When Israeli security imprints itself on individual lives, the book argues, security propagates the very fears it claims to prevent.

Inhoudelijk sluit dit boek aan bij onderwerpen als Police and security services, Anthropology, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Human Services.

Serie: The Ethnography of Political Violence

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