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Hits 441 – 445 of 445

441
Research and Training on White Dialectics: Some Next Steps
In: http://tcp.sagepub.com/content/39/3/396.full.pdf
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442
Languages of Science in the Era of Nation-state Formation: The Israeli Universities and Their (non)Participation in the Revival of Hebrew1
In: http://www.openu.ac.il/Personal_sites/download/Alek/82 Universities and Hebrew revival - JMMD, 26, 1 (2005).pdf
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443
Language-Skill Complementarity: Returns to Immigrant Language Acquisition
In: http://www.bu.edu/econ/workingpapers/papers/Kevin%20Lang/russ-isr.pdf
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444
Geographies of Escape: Diasporic Difference and Arab Ethnicity Re-Examined.
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445
Linguistic and Spatial Practice in a Divided Landscape
Sone, Abigail. - NO_RESTRICTION
Abstract: This dissertation demonstrates how changes in spatial boundaries map on to changes in the boundaries of national belonging through an ethnography of linguistic and spatial practice in a divided landscape. In Israel, as in many places around the globe, new forms of segregation have emerged in recent years, as violence and the fear of violence become increasingly bound up with the production of social difference and exclusion. In Wadi Ara, a valley in the north of the country where my fieldwork was based, segregation between Jewish and Palestinian citizens has dramatically increased since the fall of 2000, as the place of Palestinians in a Jewish state is being reconfigured. In this dissertation I focus on the changing movements and interactions of Jewish Israelis in Wadi Ara as they articulate with changes in the ways difference, belonging, and citizenship are organized on a national scale. I examine how increased hostility, fear, and distrust have become spatialized; how narratives of the past shape contemporary geographies; how competing ways of interpreting and navigating the landscape are mediated; and how particular forms of encounter are framed. My central argument is that through daily linguistic and spatial practice people in Wadi Ara do more than just make sense of shifting boundaries; they bring these boundaries into being and, in the process, they enact both self-definition and exclusion, reflecting and circumscribing the changing place of Palestinians in Israel. The dissertation is based on 19 months of fieldwork between 2002 and 2006. ; PhD
Keyword: 0326; Ethnography; Israel
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1807/24319
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