"An Israeli book deconstructs the mythology surrounding the building of Tel Aviv [...]
A publisher as well as an architect, Mr Rotbard is deliberate with his words. “Cities and histories”, he writes, “are constructed in a similar manner—always by the victor, always for the victor, and always according to the victor’s record.” For him, the nickname “White City” conjures up other colonial cities like Algiers (where the adjoining kasbah was left intact). But it is also white as in “the white of the eraser, the Tipp-Ex”, as well as “white lies”."
http://www.economist.com/news/books-and-arts/21642122-israeli-book-deconstructs-mythology-surrounding-building-tel-aviv?fsrc=rss%7Cbar
Showing posts with label tel aviv. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tel aviv. Show all posts
Thursday, February 5, 2015
Barbara Speed / White City, Black City: Sharon Rotbard and the politics of architecture in Tel Aviv (Citymetrics.com February 5, 2015)
"White City, Black City, published in English for the first time this month. In it, Rotbard examines the relationship between Tel Aviv and the Arab city it was built outside, Jaffa – the “black city” of the book’s title. The two are allegedly one city, known as Tel-Aviv-Yafo; but the north and south are distinct, with different demographics, levels of wealth, and, of course, architecture."
http://www.citymetric.com/skylines/white-city-black-city-sharon-rotbard-and-politics-architecture-tel-aviv-717
http://www.citymetric.com/skylines/white-city-black-city-sharon-rotbard-and-politics-architecture-tel-aviv-717
Labels:
Interviews,
jaffa,
Sharon Rotbard,
tel aviv
Monday, January 26, 2015
Arik Einstein / The White City
Music and Lyrics: Naomi Shemer (1960)
Singer: Arik Einstein (from the 1984 "Good Old Eretz Israel" LP)
Naomi Shemer (1930–2004) was one of Israel’s most popular songwriters and composers, known for nationalist hymns like ‘Yerushalaim Shel Zahav’ (Golden Jerusalem), which became the country’s anthem during the Six Day War.
Born and raised in Kibbutz Kineret near the Sea
of Galilee, she was later identified with extreme right-wing factions of the settler movement based in the Occupied Territories.
Arik Einstein (1939–2013) is considered to be one of Israel’s most popular singers and actors and certainly the most ‘Israeli’ and ‘Tel Avivian’ among Israeli singers. As many Israeli popular culture figures of his generation, he made his appearance as a star within a military entertainment group and moved gradually after his release from the army towards a more counter-cultural notion.
Here is an unrhymed purely literal English translation of the lyrics:
From the froth of a wave and a cloud
I built myself a white city
Stormy, fluid, beautiful.
As a clean morning comes, a window opens
And you, girl, are looking at it
Just like a dove before its flight.
Because the dawn and the light have come
And my city is out to commerce
And it is loaded Heavily.
Here is my city, big as the light
And you are a grey grain of dust
A grain of dust attached to its scarf.
From the froth of a wave and a cloud
I built myself a white city
Stormy, fluid, beautiful.
As a soft evening comes, a window opens
And you, girl, are looking at it
Just like a queen waiting for her champion.
Because the black night has come
And my city is illuminated all around
And its lights are a necklace on your neck.
Here is my big city at night
And it is a dark and huge palace
And my girl reigns in it until tomorrow.
Thursday, January 22, 2015
Owen Hatherley / A Demolition Job (The Guardian, January 22, 2015)
"if you want an explanation of the roots of the Israel-Palestine conflict – and of just how deep they go, right into the very foundations of the buildings – this book gives one of the most unusual and convincing accounts."
| A Bauhaus-style 1930s apartment building in Tel Aviv. Photograph: Uzi Keren/Getty Images |
Labels:
bauhaus,
jaffa,
Sharon Rotbard,
tel aviv
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