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A History of Palestine in Twelve Photographs

Hosted by the Department of International History

Wolfson Theatre, New Academic Building, ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳, United Kingdom

Speaker

Mr Roger Hardy

Mr Roger Hardy

Associate Fellow, Green Templeton College, University of Oxford

Chair

Professor Nigel Ashton

Professor Nigel Ashton

Professor, ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳

Book Launch

Photography is an underused resource in the study of modern Palestine. Photographers, both Western and local, suffered from religious, political and Orientalist prejudices -- but their work provides valuable evidence, not least of the much-contested events of 1948-49.

In The Bride, Roger Hardy uses both photography and oral history to illuminate the story of Palestine from 1850 to 1948. Photographers were drawn to Palestine by a special quality of light which threw into sharp relief the walls and cobbled streets of Jerusalem’s Old City, the white apartment blocks of the new metropolis of Tel Aviv, the dust and rubble of houses blown up by soldiers during the rebellion of the 1930s.

 is published on 5 May by Mount Orleans Press, in hardback and paperback editions.

 

Speaker and Chair

was for more than twenty years a Middle East analyst with the BBC World Service. He is the author of , and is an associate fellow of Green Templeton College, University of Oxford.

Professor Nigel Ashton is a specialist in contemporary Anglo-American relations and the modern history of the Middle East. His most recent publication,  (Atlantic Books, 2022), shows how a combination of fear and hubris led successive British leaders into a series of fateful interventions in the Middle East. Twitter: @NigelJohnAshton

 

More About This Event

This event is will be recorded as a podcast and made available to the public soon after.

The Department of International History (@lsehistory) teaches and conducts research on the international history of Britain, Europe and the world from the early modern era up to the present day.

Photo credits: Safad, 1949 (Zoltan Kluger; source: Government Press Office); Woman of Bethlehem, 1900s (American Colony; source: Library of Congress); Lord Plumer et al, 1925 (American Colony; source: Library of Congress)

 

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