ABSTRACT

This transnational collection of essays, interviews, and creative pieces on the 1982 Siege of Beirut explores literary representations of the siege by a diverse set of writers alongside journalism and other media including film and art. The book investigates and promotes an awareness of an ethics of representation on questions of extreme emotional investment, comparing representations of the siege to representations of other traumatic events, visiting responses from those of different cultural backgrounds to the same event and considering implications with respect to comparative approaches. Chapters explore how literature, journalism and art contribute to overcoming the dangers of forgetting and denial, memorial excess and fundamentalism, the radicalization of violence, and the complete breakdown of trust on international levels, asking how they challenge geopolitical, intellectual, and psychological states of siege and instead promote awareness, acknowledgement, mourning, and justice across divided communities. The book extends the use of postcolonial methodologies affiliated with history, international relations, and psychoanalysis (memory, trauma) to Middle-Eastern studies, and visits the siege’s effect on different forms of memory and memorialization: selective memory, trauma, gaps and fissures in historical accounts, recording of eyewitness reports, and artistic re-imaginings and realizations of alternative archives.

chapter |20 pages

Introduction

part I|139 pages

Representing the Siege

chapter 1|14 pages

‘War Is Surrealism without Art'

‘Representing the Unrepresentable' in Mahmoud Darwish's Memory for Forgetfulness, Rawi Hage's De Niro's Game, and Robert Fisk's Pity the Nation

chapter 2|19 pages

Writing Beirut c.1982

James Buchan, Robert Fisk, and Charles Glass

chapter 3|15 pages

‘Besiege Your Siege!'

Mahmoud Darwish, Representation, and the Siege of Beirut

chapter 4|15 pages

‘Looking the Beast in the Eye'

Screening Trauma in Waltz with Bashir and Lebanon

chapter 6|21 pages

A Question of Faith in Humanity

Jean Said Makdisi's Beirut Fragments and Other Beirut Fragments

chapter 7|16 pages

Violence, Trauma, and Subjectivity

Compromise Formations of Survival in the Novels of Rawi Hage and Mischa Hiller

chapter 8|14 pages

Contrapuntal Beauty and the Betrayal of Representation

Jean Genet after Shatila

chapter 9|11 pages

Jawdat R. Haydar and William Wordsworth

London under Siege, 1982

part II|57 pages

Remembering and Reporting the Siege

chapter 10|13 pages

Reporting Sabra and Shatila

chapter 11|6 pages

Recording Memory

The Palestinian Experience

chapter 12|2 pages

Excerpt from

Beirut Fragments: A War Memoir 1

chapter 13|7 pages

Interview with Robert Fisk

chapter 15|7 pages

Interview with Mai Masri