123
ISCC 7 (2) pp. 123–136 Intellect Limited 2016
Interactions: Studies in Communication & Culture
Volume 7 Number 2
© 2016 Intellect Ltd Article. English language. doi: 10.1386/iscc.7.2.123_1
KEYWORDS
Holocaust
Israeli culture
Israeli–Palestinian
conflict
Israeli cinema
Israeli literature
collective memory
LIAT STEIR-LIVNY
Sabir Academic College and The Open University of Israel
From victims to perpetrators:
Cultural representations
of the link between the
Holocaust and the Israeli–
Palestinian conflict
ABSTRACT
This article proposes a reading of films and literary works of Jewish–Israeli directors
and writers that represent a link between the Holocaust and the Israeli–Palestinian
conflict. Based on LaCapra’s ‘acting out’ and Hirsch’s ‘postmemory’ it examines
the way artists reflect the complex political blend of the Holocaust and the Israeli–
Palestinian conflict. The article shows that, alongside a right-wing narrative that
represents the Arabs as the Nazis’ successors, Hebrew literature and cinema, espe-
cially in the last decade, reflect mainly the opinions of the left and extreme left wing
in Israel, who do not accept this equation, but create what can be called a ‘counter-
acting-out’ – a reversed equation in which the resemblance between the Holocaust
and the Nakbah and/or Israel Defense Forces (IDF) soldiers and Nazis is repre-
sented. The fact that the politicization of the Holocaust is tossed from one political
side to the other reflects the confusion and ambivalence in Israel’s postmemory of the
Holocaust, and indicates the struggle between different memory agents on the collec-
tive memory of the Holocaust.