$41.84
- Cloth hardcover
- 213 × 252 mm
- 128 pages
- 60 color illustrations
- ISBN 978-3-86828-980-0
- English
Israel has been in a near-continuous state of conflict since the day of its proclamation, some seventy years ago. It has sustained its military through compulsory service. The overwhelming majority of those in its Defense Forces were born in Israel, raised alongside this notion of service. But theirs is not the only story of Israel’s soldiers.There is a group of young men and women,non-Israelis numbering in the thousands, who come from coun-tries around the world and volunteer into this legacy. For them, the price of admission into Israeli society is this very service.They are called »lone soldiers.« Brant Slomovic considers their story through portraits and a survey of Israel’s landscape. He asks where they came from, who they are, and why they sought out Israel as their home.
Brant Slomovic (b. 1970, Montreal) is a Canadian photo-essayist based in Toronto, with a background as an emergency medicine physician. His experiences as a frontline doctor inform a unique perspective on the human condition, an attribute he carries with him into his role as a storyteller and image maker. He employs long-form documentary projects to examine narratives of culture and identity. What underlies Brant’s approach is a viewpoint that considers every person through a lens of commonality and connection.