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Zusatztext Civic Aesthetics is a highly original and profoundly significant publication that enhances our understanding of contemporary Israeli art! culture and society. Roei's rigorous multidisciplinary scholarship is embedded within a nuanced theoretical framework! as she cogently demonstrates how various military 'components' manifest themselves within Israeli visual culture! both explicitly and implicitly. Roei's subtle understanding of how visible or invisible contexts or 'framing devices' shape vision itself -- exposing sights! oversights! and blind spots - and her examination of the simultaneous complicity and criticality inherent in cultural artifacts and practiced by artists and viewers alike - present eye-opening issues vis-à-vis the complexities that bind art and politics. Roei's lucid and fascinating text concerning Israeli culture! goes well beyond its specific locus! and offers a prime example of the poignancy and potency of "visual epistemology" as a mode of knowing and understanding. Informationen zum Autor Noa Roei is Assistant Professor in the Comparative Literature and Cultural Analysis department at the University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands and a research fellow at the Amsterdam School of Cultural Analysis. Klappentext Awarded an Honourable Mention by the Association for Israeli Studies. Exploring the politics of the image in the context of Israeli militarized visual culture, Civic Aesthetics examines both the omnipresence of militarism in Israeli culture and society and the way in which this omnipresence is articulated, enhanced, and contested within local contemporary visual art. Looking at a range of contemporary artworks through the lens of "civilian militarism", Roei employs the theory of various fields, including memory studies, gender studies, landscape theory, and aesthetics, to explore the potential of visual art to communicate military excesses to its viewers. This study builds on the specific sociological concerns of the chosen cases to discuss the complexities of visuality, the visible and non-visible, arguing for art's capacity to expose the scopic regimes that construct their visibility. Images and artworks are often read either out of context, on purely aesthetic or art-historical ground, or as cultural artefacts whose aesthetics play a minor role in their significance. This book breaks with both traditions as it approaches all art, both high and popular art, as part of the surrounding visual culture in which it is created and presented. This approach allows a new theory of the image to come forth, where the relation between the political and the aesthetic is one of exchange, rather than exclusion.Focusing on present-day Israel, this book examines the relation between visual art, militarism, and national identity. Zusammenfassung Awarded an Honourable Mention by the Association for Israeli Studies. Exploring the politics of the image in the context of Israeli militarized visual culture, Civic Aesthetics examines both the omnipresence of militarism in Israeli culture and society and the way in which this omnipresence is articulated, enhanced, and contested within local contemporary visual art. Looking at a range of contemporary artworks through the lens of “civilian militarism”, Roei employs the theory of various fields, including memory studies, gender studies, landscape theory, and aesthetics, to explore the potential of visual art to communicate military excesses to its viewers. This study builds on the specific sociological concerns of the chosen cases to discuss the complexities of visuality, the visible and non-visible, arguing for art's capacity to expose the scopic regimes that construct their visibility. Images and artworks are often read either out of context, on purely aesthetic or art-historical ground, or as cultural artefacts whose aesthetics play a minor role in their significance. This book br...