TY - JOUR
T1 - Reconfiguring the "mixed town"
T2 - Urban transformations of ethnonational relations in Palestine and Israel
AU - Rabinowitz, Dan
AU - Monterescu, Daniel
PY - 2008/5
Y1 - 2008/5
N2 - Studies of Middle Eastern urbanism have traditionally been guided by a limited repertoire of tropes, many of which emphasize antiquity, confinement, and religiosity. Notions of the old city, the walled city, the casbah, the native quarter, and the medina, sometimes subsumed in the quintessential "Islamic city," have all been part of Western scholarship's long-standing fascination with the region. Etched in emblematic "holy cities" like Jerusalem, Mecca, or Najaf, Middle Eastern urban space is heavily associated with the "sacred," complete with mystical visions and assumptions of violent eschatologies and redemption.
AB - Studies of Middle Eastern urbanism have traditionally been guided by a limited repertoire of tropes, many of which emphasize antiquity, confinement, and religiosity. Notions of the old city, the walled city, the casbah, the native quarter, and the medina, sometimes subsumed in the quintessential "Islamic city," have all been part of Western scholarship's long-standing fascination with the region. Etched in emblematic "holy cities" like Jerusalem, Mecca, or Najaf, Middle Eastern urban space is heavily associated with the "sacred," complete with mystical visions and assumptions of violent eschatologies and redemption.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=42549123533&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1017/S0020743808080513
DO - 10.1017/S0020743808080513
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AN - SCOPUS:42549123533
SN - 0020-7438
VL - 40
SP - 195
EP - 226
JO - International Journal of Middle East Studies
JF - International Journal of Middle East Studies
IS - 2
ER -