Image for Imagining Zion: dreams, designs, and realities in a century of Jewish settlement

Imagining Zion: dreams, designs, and realities in a century of Jewish settlement

See all formats and editions

The story of how Zionist colonisers planned and established nearly 700 agricultural settlements, towns and cities from the 1880s to the present.

This extraordinary activity of planners, architects, social scientists, military personnel, politicians and settlers is inextricably linked to multiple contexts: Jewish and Zionist history, the Arab/Jewish conflict, and the diffusion of European ideas to non-European worlds.;Ilan Troen demonstrates how professionals and settlers continually innovated plans for both rural and urban frontiers in response to the competing demands of social and political ideologies and the need to achieve productivity, economic independence, and security in a hostile environment.

In the 1930s, security became the primary challenge, shaping and even distorting patterns of growth.;Not until the 1993 Oslo Accords, with prospects of compromise and accommodation, did planners again imagine Israel as a normal state, developing like other modern societies.

Troen concludes that if Palestinian Arabs become reconciled to a Jewish state, Israel will reassign priority to the social and economic development of the country and region.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£25.00
Product Details
Yale University Press
0300128002 / 9780300128000
eBook (Adobe Pdf, EPUB)
13/06/2003
English
325 pages
156 x 235 mm, 667 grams
Copy: 10%; print: 10%