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ID172913
Title ProperLockdown
Other Title InformationGaza through a Camera Lens and Historical Mirror
LanguageENG
AuthorFields, Gary
Summary / Abstract (Note)Gaza is often decried as a uniquely brutal open-air prison, but is the carceral condition imposed on the Gaza Strip part of a broader historical lineage of confinement landscapes? The argument in this essay is that Gaza belongs to a historically longstanding lineage of places and people subjected to practices of incarceration imposed on landscapes, and that the system of confinement in the Gaza Strip has escaped systematic comparison to these other confined spaces. To support this contention, the essay compares the prison-like conditions of Gaza to three examples of carceral environments: the early-modern, plague-stricken European town; the carceral landscape of the “cotton kingdom” in the antebellum American South; and the French system of confinement in the pacification of Algeria. Using both text and photographic images, this article also speculates that situating Gaza within this comparative frame at this moment offers new opportunities for changing the discourse about Gaza to a world seemingly indifferent to the injustices suffered by the Palestinians of Gaza.
`In' analytical NoteJournal of Palestine Studies Vol. 49, No.3; Spring 2020: p.41–69
Journal SourceJournal of Palestine Studies 2020-06 49, 3
Key WordsGaza ;  Camera Lens ;  Historical Mirror