"This significant work charts the ways in which New Israeli Horror films offer a critique of the violence that lies at the heart of Israeli society, the damaging masculinity of the military machine, and the suppression of Palestinian trauma. The result is a hugely readable and subtly nuanced work that makes a substantive contribution to our understanding of both modern Israel and the horror genre's ability to articulate national trauma. It's essential reading for all with an interest in the genre and in national cinema more broadly." -- Linnie Blake, Manchester Metropolitan University and author of The Wounds of Nations: Horror Cinema, Historical Tr "Richly entertaining and informative."-- Haaretz "Gershenson provides a thorough, eloquent, and brilliant analysis of the reasons behind the rise of this new genre in Israel."-- Maariv "New Israeli Horror is the definitive study of Israeli cinema's most unorthodox genre from its inception among a small group of students at Tel Aviv University to its success on the international film festival circuit and in online piracy in the Arab world. Through an examination of technology, financing, transnational adaptation, local and international reception, and interviews with filmmakers it deciphers the meanings behind the throng of serial killers in uniform, Palestinian ghosts, zombies, cannibals, and monsters from Jewish folklore that have invaded Israeli screens in this millennium." -- Boaz Hagin, co-editor of Deeper Than Oblivion: Trauma and Memory in Israeli Cinema "Excellent.
"-- New Books Network "This is a fantastic book that looks at the intellectual, industrial, funding, and reception contexts of Israeli horror but without bouncing between them like demented pinball. Instead, what we get is an extraordinarily integrated interdisciplinary account that should operate as an exemplar for horror scholarship for decades to come!" -- Mark Jancovich, author of Horror and editor of Horror, The Film Reader "New Israeli Horror perceptively chronicles the origins and evolution of Israeli horror films. It brilliantly analyzes how this corpus of films replicated or subverted the familiar tropes of the horror genre and demonstrates that they possess implicit and eventually explicit relevance to the political and social conflicts within Israel." -- Lawrence Baron, author of Projecting The Holocaust Into The Present and editor of The Modern Jewish Experience in Wo "Gershenson's book is one of the most comprehensive and captivating studies on Israeli cinema."-- Walla.