Amir Hetsroni

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Amir Hetsroni

Professor
Amir Hetsroni.jpg
Hetsroni in 2019
Born (1968-02-06) February 6, 1968 (age 53)
NationalityIsraeli
CitizenshipPoland, Romania, Israel
OccupationAssociate professor at Koç University in Istanbul
Known forHis radical political views
Parent(s)Sima Hetsroni (1932-2011), David Hetsroni (1931-2016)
Academic background
Alma materHebrew University of Jerusalem
ThesisPublic Perception of Nostalgia and Contents of Nostalgia in Advertising (1999)
Academic advisorsHanna Adoni, Jacob Shamir

Amir Hetsroni (born February 6, 1968) is an Israeli professor of communication who currently teaches at Koç University in Istanbul.[1] He is also a novelist and publicist in Israel known for his extremely divisive views.

Biography[]

Amir Hetsroni was born on February 6, 1968 in Tel Aviv, the only child of Sima Kolker (1932–2011) and David Hetsroni (formerly Shtagovsky; 1933-2016). Upon finishing high school studies he was conscripted into the Israel Defense Forces for three years. He was initially deployed in Nablus and as a security guard at a military base in Tel Aviv before serving as a military correspondent for two years.[2] He graduated with BA in Psychology and Cinema and Television from Tel Aviv University in 1993 and received an MA in 1996 and PhD in Communication from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem in 1999. He worked as a senior lecturer at Max Stern Yezreel Valley College from 2000 to 2009 and then became a professor at Ariel University which fired him in 2014[3] following an article he wrote that supported the BDS movement and objected to the 2014 Israel-Gaza conflict.[4] In May 2015, he left Israel for Denmark.[5] After living in Copenhagen for a while, he moved to China and taught at Xi'an Jiaotong-Liverpool University in Suzhou for a year, then moved to Turkey and became a full-time associate professor at Koç University in Istanbul.[1] Hetsroni published hundreds of op-ed articles expressing post-Zionist views,[6] one novel פיצוחים ("Family Feud" – Hebrew) about wallflower upbringing in the 1980s, and one graphic novel אבוד בסין ("Lost in China" – Hebrew) written in collaboration with Racheli Rottner and based on his turbulent partly open relationship with Shirin Noufi – an Israeli-Arab lawyer.[7] Hetsroni is intentionally child free.[8]

In May 2020, as part of (SIFF) official competition, a feature-length documentary ""[9] made by the Swiss-Israeli psychologist and film director was screened.[10] The film was shot in late 2016, on the month following David Hetsroni's – Amir's father – death, and unfolds Amir's mourning process and his relationship with Shirin Noufi, his partner at the time.[11] The film won the first place in the festival's "Best Documentary" category.[12] Later on that year, "Amir Hetsroni: Case Study" was also selected for [13] in England, and for , where it has won the prize for "Best Editing".[14]

Academic work[]

Hetsroni wrote and edited four books and nearly 100 journal articles and book chapters. His main areas of research are sex, violence, and other objectionable contents on television programs and commercials and their effect on our perception of daily life. He showed that in contrast with common wisdom, inpatients in medical drama are more likely to die than in real hospitals[15] and that religious viewers tend to be less afraid of crime and terror as they watch more television than are non-religious viewers.[16] In the main, Hetsroni aligns with the cultivation school which suggests that routine viewing of television unconsciously influences the viewers to see the world through TV eyes, but he often adopts a more limited effect paradigm than the theory proponents George Gerbner and Larry Gross. Hetsroni's most original contribution to the scientific literature is the conception of pluralistic media ignorance according to which the more saturated the home screen is with objectionable content, the more likely viewers are to over-estimate the content's actual prevalence because of the difficulty in counting.[17] He was associate editor of Communication Research Reports and Corporate Communications and is listed among the 100 most prolific authors in advertising scholarship in a study published in 2008 in Journal of Advertising.[18]

Political opinions and ideological debates[]

Hetsroni describes himself as an "anti-Zionist who is not pro-Arabic". He has made comments in favor of colonialism and against absorption of refugees from the Third World. Since the early 2010s, Hetsroni's name has been associated with various scandals where he expressed a divisive outlook. In 2011, when a socialist protester set himself alight at a demonstration, Hetsroni commented that this was "an inexpensive way to get rid of a social parasite". In 2013, he described feminist women marching in the SlutWalk as "too bulky to be looked at" and said that if he needed to choose between rescuing a feminist and rescuing a cat, he would rescue the cat as cats are more grateful than are feminists. He sued for slander a feminist activist who called him "misogynist consumer of prostitution" and won.[19] In 2014, he described the Israeli war in Gaza as a massacre,[20] and in 2015 he blamed Mizrahi Jews in the victory of the right wing in the parliamentary elections, and added that these Jews should have stayed in their homeland. This brought about public outcry and demands to interrogate Hetsroni for spreading racism and hate speech.[21] Further demands came in 2016, when Hetsroni desecrated the national flag by posting a picture in which he uses the flag to mop the floor at his house[22] and in 2017 when he posted a picture of himself smiling on the graves of soldiers saying that they were "idiots who did not know how to avoid the draft".[23] Israel's attorney general dismissed all the claims to put Hetsroni on trial, stipulating that his words fall within the perimeter of free speech.[24] Most recently, a noted Rabbi, Meir Mazuz called Hetsroni "incarnation of the devil".[25] Hetsroni himself proudly announced that he is "no longer Jewish".[26]

Books[]

Ellis, L., Hershberger, S., Field, E., Wersinger, S., Pellis, S., Geary, D., Palmer, C. T., Hoyenga, K., Hetsroni, A., & Kazmer, K., & (2008). Sex differences: Summarizing more than a century of scientific research. London: Routledge.
Hetsroni, A. (Ed.). (2010). Reality television: Merging the global and the local. Hauppauge, NY: Nova Science Publishers.
Hetsroni, A.. (2012). Advertising and reality: A global study of representation and content. NY: Continuum.
Hetsroni, A. (Ed.). (2016). Television and romance – Studies, observations and interpretations. Hauppauge, NY: Nova Science Publishers.
חצרוני, א' (2013). פיצוחים . ת"א: ידיעות ספרים. (Novel in Hebrew)

External links[]

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b "Amir Hetsroni". Koç University College of Social Sciences and Humanities. Retrieved May 1, 2018.
  2. ^ "The Biggest Mistake of My Life: Serving in the IDF". The Times of Israel. Retrieved May 2, 2018.
  3. ^ "Interview with professor fired by West Bank university who compares himself to Steven Salaita". Retrieved May 1, 2018.
  4. ^ Hetsroni, Amir (August 27, 2014). "Israeli Universities' Response to Gaza War May Justify an Academic Boycott". Haaretz. Retrieved May 1, 2018.
  5. ^ https://www.globes.co.il/news/article.aspx?did=1001037007
  6. ^ Hetsroni, Amir (May 13, 2011). "A Bad Decision?". Haaretz. Retrieved May 1, 2018.
  7. ^ "אבוד בסין: סיפורו של אמיר חצרוני – וואלה! תרבות". וואלה! תרבות (in Hebrew). Retrieved May 1, 2018.
  8. ^ "להיות אמיר חצרוני: מה מסתתר בראשו של האדם שהסעיר את המדינה? – וואלה! תרבות". וואלה! תרבות (in Hebrew). Retrieved May 1, 2018.
  9. ^ Amir Hetsroni: Case Study on IMDB, retrieved August 1, 2020
  10. ^ Amir Hetsroni: Case Study on SIFF 2020, retrieved May 29, 2020
  11. ^ Amir Hetsroni: Case Study on Amazon, retrieved September 5, 2020
  12. ^ SIFF 2020 Award Winners, retrieved May 29, 2020
  13. ^ Out of The Can Film Festival 2020, retrieved July 15, 2020
  14. ^ AIFF 2020 Official Selection, retrieved August 31, 2020
  15. ^ Hetsroni, Amir (November 4, 2009). "If You Must Be Hospitalized, Television Is Not the Place: Diagnoses, Survival Rates and Demographic Characteristics of Patients in TV Hospital Dramas". Communication Research Reports. 26 (4): 311–322. doi:10.1080/08824090903293585. S2CID 145227100.
  16. ^ "Religion, Crime, and Television – Freakonomics". Freakonomics. July 5, 2012. Retrieved May 1, 2018.
  17. ^ Hetsroni, Amir (June 1, 2011). "Pluralistic media ignorance: Presence and causes". The Social Science Journal. 48 (2): 324–334. doi:10.1016/j.soscij.2010.12.004. ISSN 0362-3319. S2CID 93256300.
  18. ^ Ford, John B.; Merchant, Altaf (2008). "A Ten-Year Retrospective of Advertising Research Productivity, 1997–2006". Journal of Advertising. 37 (3): 69–94. doi:10.2753/JOA0091-3367370306. ISSN 0091-3367. S2CID 144790155.
  19. ^ "פשרה: אורטל בן-דיין התנצלה בפני אמיר חצרוני ותשלם פיצוי כספי". העין השביעית (in Hebrew). Retrieved May 1, 2018.
  20. ^ Hetsroni, Amir (2014). "Israeli Universities' Response to Gaza War May Justify an Academic Boycott". Haaretz. Retrieved May 1, 2018.
  21. ^ "Police weigh charges against former professor's racist statements against Sephardi Jews". The Jerusalem Post | JPost.com. Retrieved May 1, 2018.
  22. ^ Kubovich, Yaniv (2016). "Israel's Selective Enforcement of Flag Desecration Offenses Is Based on Sentiment". Haaretz. Retrieved May 1, 2018.
  23. ^ "אין גבול: אמיר חצרוני צוחק אפילו על חללי צה"ל". mako. April 26, 2017. Retrieved May 1, 2018.
  24. ^ "הפרקליטות קבעה: אין מקום לפתוח בחקירה נגד חצרוני". מקור ראשון (in Hebrew). Retrieved May 1, 2018.
  25. ^ "Yahad rabbi takes on professor over anti-Passover rant". Israel National News. Retrieved May 1, 2018.
  26. ^ "לא יעזור לכם, אני לא יהודי". walla. March 29, 2015. Retrieved May 1, 2018.
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