The Museological Side of the Conflict: Israeli Exhibition of Terror and the Palestinian Museum of Prisoners

This essay deals with a section of somewhat unfamiliar terrain within the battlefield of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict: museum sites. The focus is on two museological case studies, the Palestinian Museum of Prisoners in Abu Dis and the Israeli Captured Material Display (also known as the Exhibiti...

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Main Authors: Yonatan Mendel, Alexa Rose Steinberg
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Leicester 2011-11-01
Series:Museum & Society
Online Access:https://journals.le.ac.uk/ojs1/index.php/mas/article/view/184
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spelling doaj-25782c2e26064b268df07fba11542ec42020-11-25T00:14:24ZengUniversity of LeicesterMuseum & Society1479-83602011-11-0193190213173The Museological Side of the Conflict: Israeli Exhibition of Terror and the Palestinian Museum of PrisonersYonatan MendelAlexa Rose SteinbergThis essay deals with a section of somewhat unfamiliar terrain within the battlefield of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict: museum sites. The focus is on two museological case studies, the Palestinian Museum of Prisoners in Abu Dis and the Israeli Captured Material Display (also known as the Exhibition of Terror) in Ramat Hasharon. Through an analysis of the artistic, educational and political characteristics of both sites, one can observe the complex internal and external power relations of museums located within an ongoing conflict zone. The essay will showcase the role these institutions play in a tenacious struggle for representation amidst efforts to gain the hearts and minds of the world’s public opinion while simultaneously battling for national and communal memory. It will show that museums both serve as and perpetuate model behavior and perceptions of a political consciousness and its enemy and, in doing so, help shape political discourse. It also suggests that the study of Israeli and Palestinian museological sites can make a significant contribution to the understanding of Israeli and Palestinian collective fears, phobias, political perceptions, and desires.https://journals.le.ac.uk/ojs1/index.php/mas/article/view/184
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yonatan Mendel
Alexa Rose Steinberg
spellingShingle Yonatan Mendel
Alexa Rose Steinberg
The Museological Side of the Conflict: Israeli Exhibition of Terror and the Palestinian Museum of Prisoners
Museum & Society
author_facet Yonatan Mendel
Alexa Rose Steinberg
author_sort Yonatan Mendel
title The Museological Side of the Conflict: Israeli Exhibition of Terror and the Palestinian Museum of Prisoners
title_short The Museological Side of the Conflict: Israeli Exhibition of Terror and the Palestinian Museum of Prisoners
title_full The Museological Side of the Conflict: Israeli Exhibition of Terror and the Palestinian Museum of Prisoners
title_fullStr The Museological Side of the Conflict: Israeli Exhibition of Terror and the Palestinian Museum of Prisoners
title_full_unstemmed The Museological Side of the Conflict: Israeli Exhibition of Terror and the Palestinian Museum of Prisoners
title_sort museological side of the conflict: israeli exhibition of terror and the palestinian museum of prisoners
publisher University of Leicester
series Museum & Society
issn 1479-8360
publishDate 2011-11-01
description This essay deals with a section of somewhat unfamiliar terrain within the battlefield of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict: museum sites. The focus is on two museological case studies, the Palestinian Museum of Prisoners in Abu Dis and the Israeli Captured Material Display (also known as the Exhibition of Terror) in Ramat Hasharon. Through an analysis of the artistic, educational and political characteristics of both sites, one can observe the complex internal and external power relations of museums located within an ongoing conflict zone. The essay will showcase the role these institutions play in a tenacious struggle for representation amidst efforts to gain the hearts and minds of the world’s public opinion while simultaneously battling for national and communal memory. It will show that museums both serve as and perpetuate model behavior and perceptions of a political consciousness and its enemy and, in doing so, help shape political discourse. It also suggests that the study of Israeli and Palestinian museological sites can make a significant contribution to the understanding of Israeli and Palestinian collective fears, phobias, political perceptions, and desires.
url https://journals.le.ac.uk/ojs1/index.php/mas/article/view/184
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