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400 pages, Paperback
First published July 20, 2004
This was a territorial formation that Israel had explicitly rejected for itself because its boundaries would have been "twisted" and "broken" and many of its villages would have been separated from their fields. And yet he "peace process" produced exactly the same forsions and severations. It depended on what Israeli architect Eyal Weizmann calls "an Escher-like representation of space," a "politics of verticality" in which Palestine was to be splintered into a territorial hologram of six dimensions, "three Jewish and three Arab." Projecting this topological imaginary onto the ground, a baroque system of underpasses, overpasses, and even a viaduct from Gaza to the West Bank would make it possible to draw a continuous boundary between Israel and Palestine without dismantling the blocs of illegal settlements.
The use of the fictive "we" is deliberate; a vantage point was carefully constructed to both privilege and protect the (American) viewer through a fabrication of (American) innocence and the demonization of the (Iraqi) enemy. By conferring an instantaneous ubiquity upon the spectator, the circumference of this Americanocentric vision seemed to be projected from an Archimedean point in geosynchronous orbit above all partisan interests: a sort of universal projection. And, as Paul Virillo remarked, it also pulled off a God-trick. Proclamining "ubiquity, instantaneity, immediacy, omnipresence, omnivoyance" it transformed the spectator into "a divine being, at once here and there." From this position and perspective, war became "the remote controlled destruction of places whose only existence to military personnel was as electronic target coordinates on a screen," and O'Tuathail argues that the complicity between "the eye of the military's watching machine and the eye of the television camera" effaced both the materiality of places and the corporeality of bodies. What he calls this "electronic spatiality" presented the war to its audience "as live yet distant, as instantaneous yet remote, as dramatically real yet reassuringly televisual." As these vacillations suggest, voyeurism of this sort depends upon a peculiar torsion of time and space.