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‘How Are the Mighty Fallen’: Aspects of Contemporary Israeli Theatre

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 January 2009

Abstract

Even at its most political, contemporary Israeli theatre tends to be self-referential – nowhere more so, suggests Shimon Levy, than in the theatre festivals held at Acre, where year by year over the past decade the plays selected seem to have reflected, more than coincidentally, the preoccupations of the nation, with its haunted past, its militaristic present, and a future full of uncertain or resented accommodations with neighbours for so long perceived as enemies. But Shimon Levy, who teaches in the Theatre Department at Tel Aviv University, also notes two exceptions in a generally gloomy theatrical scene: the exuberant entertainment Yanti Parazi – ‘a metaphor for the yearning for this screwed-up Holy Land’ – and a long-unperformed play on the ‘difficult’ subject of the West Bank occupation, Ephraim Returns to the Army, with its schitzoid title-character ‘deconstructing’ the conflicting elements of Israeli hopes and beliefs, for audiences not presumed to share the play's own progressive but unsentimentalized sympathies.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1990

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References

Notes and References

1. Zach, Nathan, Air Lines (Jerusalem: Keter, 1983), p. 1119Google Scholar.

2. Feingold, Ben-Ami, ‘The Theme of the Holocaust in Israeli Drama’, Zehut, 12 11 1985Google Scholar.

3. Ehud Ben Ezer, ‘Polzim U'netzurim’, in Keshet, Vol. 52.

4. Levin, Hanoch, Shits, and Other Plays (Tel Aviv: Siman Keria, 1988), p. 83Google Scholar.

5. Cf. Hutcheon, Linda, Narcissistic Narrative (London: Methuen, 1984), p. xiiiGoogle Scholar.

6. Cf. Calderon, Nissim, In a Political Context (Tel Aviv: Siman Keria, 1980), p. 66 ffGoogle Scholar.