Everyday Life in Lod

On Power, Identity, and Special Protest in a Mixed City

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.64166/tgwv6e75

Abstract

In this article I analyze the production of space in the `mixed city’ of Lod. I argue that daily life in this city, as in other `mixed cities’ in Israel, is based on an ethnic logic of space. This logic controls and anchors the demographic, cultural, and symbolic dominance of the Jewish majority over the Arab minority. My argument is informed by Henri Lefebvre’s model of the interrelations between perceived space, conceived space and lived space as three vectors that explain production of space in its tangible, professional and symbolic levels. In the article I discuss the contribution of demographic dynamics in Lod to the segregated spatial pattern of the city. I later critically outline the planning discourse that shaped the urban landscape of the city since 1948. I conclude with a study of the symbolic meaning of space in the narratives of Arab inhabitants of the city.

References

Published

2003-01-01

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

“Everyday Life in Lod: On Power, Identity, and Special Protest in a Mixed City”. 2003. Jama’a: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Middle East Studies 10 (January): 69-110. https://doi.org/10.64166/tgwv6e75.

Most read articles by the same author(s)