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How Does Khashabi Theatre Produce a ‘Dual Presence’ of Palestinian Urbanism? Ghosts and Memory in Its First Season, Haifa, 2015–2016

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 June 2023

Abstract

This article casts a spotlight on Khashabi Theatre, one of several independent Palestinian venues in Haifa. It explores Khashabi's dramaturgical–performative discourse with ghosts, and thereby examines how it produces a ‘dual presence’ of Palestinian urbanism: the ghostly presence of victims of history who were uprooted from the city, and the presence of the contemporary community that, by converging at the theatre, plays a key part in the revival of urban leisure culture. The article discusses the particular location of the theatre in the city and the dramaturgical characteristics of the two plays staged in the first season. It also examines the objects and the actors’ bodies as elements that evoke and conjure up ghosts, and shows how artistic practice, which allows alternative places to be established, plays a key role in the struggle for the ‘right to the city’, which is also the struggle for the ‘right of return’.

Type
Article
Copyright
Copyright © International Federation for Theatre Research 2023

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References

NOTES

1 I was one of the organizers of the conference, and the excerpt from the artists’ proposal is in my possession.

2 Beit-Hagefen (House of the Vine) is an Arab Jewish centre established in 1963 by then mayor Abba Khoushi to promote coexistence between Jews and Arabs in Haifa.

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33 The play was not published. All quotes from the play by courtesy of Bashar Murkus.

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38 The play was not published. All quotes from the play by courtesy of Bashar Murkus.

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