Product Description
'Filming the Modern Middle East' is the first comparative investigation of how modern American cinema and the cinemas of the Arab world represent Middle Eastern politics to their audiences. Lina Khatib examines the cinematic depictions of major political issues, from the Arab-Israeli conflict to the Gulf War, to Islamic fundamentalism, and covers films made in the USA, in Egypt, Tunisia, Morocco, Lebanon, Syria and Palestine. She explores cinema's role as a tool of nationalism in the USA and the Arab world, and the challenges the Arab cinemas present to Hollywood's dominant representations of Middle Eastern politics. But, she also reveals similarities between supposed contradictory cinemas and - importantly - not only how the 'Orient' is constructed by the 'Occident', but also how the 'Orient' itself in these cinemas represents Self and Others and how it is consumed by internal as well as external struggles. This is a fascinating, original contribution to the burgeoning interest in world cinemas, which also offers a fresh way of seeing Middle East politics through cinematic lenses.
Features
- Used Book in Good Condition
Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought
- The Arab World: Society, Culture, and State
- Reel Bad Arabs: How Hollywood Vilifies a People
- Faith Misplaced
- Popular Egyptian Cinema: Gender, Class, and Nation
- Brooklyn Heights: An Egyptian Novel
- Surviving Images: Cinema, War, and Cultural Memory in the Middle East
- Palestinian Cinema: Landscape, Trauma, and Memory
- The Modern Middle East, Third Edition: A Political History since the First World War
- Arab Cinema Travels: Transnational Syria, Palestine, Dubai and Beyond (Cultural Histories of Cinema)
- Arab Cinema: History and Cultural Identity: Revised and Updated Edition
*If this is not the "
Filming the Modern Middle East: Politics in the Cinemas of Hollywood and the Arab World (Library of " product you were looking for, you can check the other results by
clicking this link
.
Details were last updated on Feb 4, 2026 22:37 +08.