textThis thesis considers tourism in terms of the disparate dynamics of self and Other that are residual of, as well as different from, previous colonial discourses through connections between histories of Zionist travel and tourism in early twentieth century Palestine and a specific case of contemporary ethno-national tourism - the Birthright tour, which is designed exclusively for Jewish youth to visit Israel. In Chapter 1, I will introduce a history of modern tourist development in Palestine and its relationship to Zionist state building and Israeli statehood after 1948. In Chapter 2, I will analyze the rhetoric of the Birthright tour. My discussion of the Birthright tour will lead me to address questions of ethnicity and citizenship in ...
Gesher is a theatre founded by a group of Russian immigrants in Tel Aviv in 1990. Gesher is a cultur...
Israel has many meanings that are crucial to the analysis and interpretation of any resolution of th...
This special issue considers differing types of mobility to, from and within Late Ottoman and Mandat...
textThis thesis considers tourism in terms of the disparate dynamics of self and Other that are resi...
The deployment of tourism to strengthen diaspora ties is well documented, however sociologists have ...
This dissertation based on a fieldwork conducted among Czech Jewish youth during a ten-days educatio...
This thesis explores the ways in which the scopic regimes of tourism shape the production of “Israel...
Tourism is an expanding battleground of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Since the founding of the ...
Heritage tourism takes on a new meaning when conceived and implemented in the framework of a diaspor...
The current research is based on a socio-historical approach to the cultural role of tourism media i...
At the beginning of the 20th century, Ottoman Palestine became a popular destination for tourists, a...
Israel is the contested homeland of both the Jewish-Israeli and the Arab-Palestinian peoples. In the...
Since the beginning of the twentieth century, Palestine has seen complicated changes in its politica...
The Israeli State envisions itself as first and foremost a Jewish state. Its founding narrative is t...
Your Work is Not Here: Solidarity Tourism in Occupied Palestine is a multi-sited ethnographic study ...
Gesher is a theatre founded by a group of Russian immigrants in Tel Aviv in 1990. Gesher is a cultur...
Israel has many meanings that are crucial to the analysis and interpretation of any resolution of th...
This special issue considers differing types of mobility to, from and within Late Ottoman and Mandat...
textThis thesis considers tourism in terms of the disparate dynamics of self and Other that are resi...
The deployment of tourism to strengthen diaspora ties is well documented, however sociologists have ...
This dissertation based on a fieldwork conducted among Czech Jewish youth during a ten-days educatio...
This thesis explores the ways in which the scopic regimes of tourism shape the production of “Israel...
Tourism is an expanding battleground of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Since the founding of the ...
Heritage tourism takes on a new meaning when conceived and implemented in the framework of a diaspor...
The current research is based on a socio-historical approach to the cultural role of tourism media i...
At the beginning of the 20th century, Ottoman Palestine became a popular destination for tourists, a...
Israel is the contested homeland of both the Jewish-Israeli and the Arab-Palestinian peoples. In the...
Since the beginning of the twentieth century, Palestine has seen complicated changes in its politica...
The Israeli State envisions itself as first and foremost a Jewish state. Its founding narrative is t...
Your Work is Not Here: Solidarity Tourism in Occupied Palestine is a multi-sited ethnographic study ...
Gesher is a theatre founded by a group of Russian immigrants in Tel Aviv in 1990. Gesher is a cultur...
Israel has many meanings that are crucial to the analysis and interpretation of any resolution of th...
This special issue considers differing types of mobility to, from and within Late Ottoman and Mandat...