Routine Emergency: The Meaning of Life for Israelis Living Along the Gaza Border

Julia Chaitin, Sharon Steinberg, Elad Avlagon, Shoshana Steinberg

Research output: Book/ReportBookpeer-review

2 Scopus citations

Abstract

This book explores the meaning of life for Israelis from communities bordering the Gaza Strip, whose lives are bound to the intractable conflict between Israel and the Hamas regime. Based on a psychosocial qualitative study of narrative interviews, photographs, YouTube videos, and Facebook posts created by residents, the book presents the life stories of ordinary people, their perspectives of patriotism and Zionism, and their perceptions of the Gazan Palestinians. Routine Emergency captures these perspectives through analyses of residents’ interviews and photographs, the social media materials and poems fashioned from interviewees’ words. The results challenge simplistic notions of what it means to live in this warzone, offering a multi-layered analysis of life in this region, which alternates between being Heaven and Hell. Written in a reader-friendly format, Routine Emergency, offers new theoretical insights into societal beliefs connected to living in an intractable warzone on the personal, family, community and national levels.

Original languageEnglish
PublisherSpringer International Publishing
Number of pages316
ISBN (Electronic)9783030959838
ISBN (Print)9783030959821
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Jan 2022
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Discourse analysis
  • Gaza Strip
  • Intractable conflict
  • Otef Aza
  • Peace process
  • Psychosocial study
  • Qualitative study
  • Religious ideology
  • Social media
  • Terrorism
  • Trauma
  • Violence

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General Psychology
  • General Social Sciences

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