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dc.contributor.authorMONTERESCU, Daniel
dc.date.accessioned2016-07-07T08:34:48Z
dc.date.available2016-07-07T08:34:48Z
dc.date.issued2009
dc.identifier.citationPublic culture, 2009, Vol. 21, No. 2, pp. 403-430
dc.identifier.issn0899-2363
dc.identifier.issn1527-8018
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1814/42214
dc.description.abstractThe emergence of gated communities in Israel/Palestine signals new modes of urban exclusion, which reshape previous forms of spatial distinction. Focusing on the ethnically "mixed town" of Jaffa, where an unprecedented number of such gated communities have been constructed in the past decade, this article interrogates the modus operandi of the Andromeda Hill project and Palestinian resistance to it. Conceptualized as a neoliberal mode of ethnogentrification, this gated community attempts to achieve the impossible task of positioning itself both within and without local lived space and inhabited time. Operating as a neo-orientalist simulacrum, such projects subvert, spatially and semiotically, the standard logic of urban representation and modernistic notions of segregation. The concept of spatial heteronomy is proposed to address such dialectic strategies of spatial orientationality—circumventing the contested local urban space and projected onto a mythological plane of Mediterranean fantasy.
dc.language.isoen
dc.relation.ispartofPublic culture
dc.titleTo buy or not to be : trespassing the gated community
dc.typeArticle
dc.identifier.doi10.1215/08992363-2008-034
dc.identifier.volume21
dc.identifier.startpage403
dc.identifier.endpage430
eui.subscribe.skiptrue
dc.identifier.issue2


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