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"A Civilian Occupation: The Politics of Israeli Architecture"

Rafi Segal, Eyal Weizman

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Event Date: Saturday, March 13, 2004
Location: Slought Foundation
Conversations in Theory Series | Organized by Eduardo Cadava, Aaron Levy

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A public lecture by architects Rafi Segal (Princeton) and Eyal Weizman (London), with discussion to follow. Their recent book, A Civilian Occupation, will be available for purchase at the event, courtesy of Verso Books.

Censored last year by the Association of Israeli Architects, A Civilian Occupation (Verso, 2003) is the first attempt to highlight the role of Israeli architecture in the Middle East conflict. Since the beginning of the twentieth century, the declared aim of the Zionist movement has been to build a national home for the Jewish people in Israel. From the settlement offensive of the Tower and Stockade villages in the 1930s, through the total planning of the state of Israel after its independence, to the occupied territories from 1967 to the present, this book reveals how central Israeli architecture has been in securing that aim.

"Both the exhibition and the catalog were conceived as an investigation of Israeli architecture by Israeli architects, scholars, photographers and journalists, and were meant to supplement the prevalent historical and political analysis of the conflict with a detailed description of its physical transformations. They were to be presented before an international gathering of architects and intended to highlight the fact that, because the Israeli-Palestinian conflict has a clear spatial dimension, architects and planners play an important, albeit little discussed, role in its unfolding. Architecture was presented as a political issue, and furthermore as the material product of politics itself."
--Rafi Segal and Eyal Weizman, from the Introduction to A Civilian Occupation

"The questions posed by A Civilian Occupation... should be considered in a much broader context: How many architects would have declined the opportunity offered to architect Thomas Leitersdorf to design the city of his dreams? [...] Is the architect really just an innocent professional or must he choose between obedient collaboration and militant action? And finally, what is the role of politics within architecture and what is the role of architecture within politics? In these senses, the local debate initiated by Weizman and Segal should help generate new thinking on architecture, urbanism and politics. The politics of Israeli architecture is the politics of any architecture."
--Sharon Rotbard


Eyal Weizman and Rafi Segal established their architectural practice in Tel Aviv in 2000 after working together with Zvi Hecker. Their office attempts to integrate architectural projects with research and writing. Amongst their recent works are the re-design of the Ashdod Museum of Art, a set design for “Electra,” and the exhibition and publication “A Civilian Occupation” (2003). Rafi Segal worked together with Zvi Hecker on the design of the Palmach History Museum built in Tel-Aviv. Eyal Weizman is developing his “Politics of Verticality” project into a book and a film. His previous books are Yellow Rhythms (2000) and Random Walk (1998). Segal and Weizman are contributors to "Cities Without Citizens," a joint publication of Slought Foundation and the Rosenbach Museum, edited by Aaron Levy and Eduardo Cadava.

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To Cite this Page using MLA Style:

Rafi Segal, et al. "A Civilian Occupation: The Politics of Israeli Architecture." Slought Foundation Online Content.
[13 March 2004; Accessed 6 October 2008]. <http://slought.org/content/11176/>.



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This program was made possible in part through the generous sponsorship of Verso Books






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