Producing Spoilers
Peacemaking and the Production of Enmity in a Secular Age
Joyce Dalsheim
Reviews and Awards
"Producing Spoilers is a compelling book, which boldly argues that "recognizing humanity in all its complexity must surely include recognizing the humanity" — and the political imaginaries — "even of the [apparently] despicable anachronistic others who live in the past"" - Anna Bernard, Journal of Palestine Studies
"Joyce Dalsheim's book is a timely contribution to a deeper understanding of the various and contradictory narratives of Israelis and Palestinians. These are voices and views of great importance for any hoped-for peace, and yet they have been given hardly any voice by the dominant political frameworks of peace processes. Here you will find the sensitive eyes and ears of a cultural anthropologist who provides a much more nuanced reading of all the parties to the conflict. The deeper empathic understanding of these parties and their worldviews is the only hope for short term and long term solutions that involve the least amount of violence and the greatest hope for a realistic path of justice and fairness to all communities affected by this century-old conflict." - Marc Gopin, James H. Laue Professor of World Religions, Diplomacy, and Conflict Resolution, George Mason University
"This book simultaneously engages and challenges the current fashion for the reification of the enemy à la Carl Schmitt. With a moving synthesis of ethnography and theory, Dalsheim studies the site where the enemy effect is produced, in part through the very rhetoric of conflict resolution. The radical message of her work is that in a true search for peace, no onenot even the most inconvenientmay be left behind." - Jonathan Boyarin, Mann Professor of Modern Jewish Studies, Cornell University
"Nation, narration, recognition these are among the complicated terms that oscillate, rather than mediate, between war and peace. They reach deep into entrenched certainties and familiar divisions. In Israel/Palestine, Dalsheim reminds us, they endure as alibis of failure. Casting and recasting them out of the troubling margins of the so-called conflict (spoilers, settlers, peacemakers, conversation stoppers, and repugnant others), this book seeks nothing less than to move the very ground of our moral imagination." - Gil Anidjar, author of The Jew, the Arab: A History of the Enemy