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Tel quel Selbstverständnis und Rezeption (1960-1971) /Kühn, Renate, January 1974 (has links)
Thesis--Münster. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 474-491).
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Local exchange in Early Bronze age CannanMilevski, Ianir. January 1900 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Tel-Aviv University, 2005. / Title from disk.
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Regional cooperation in the Middle East : actual and potential media integration /Wittenberg, Dan. January 2000 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.) - Tel Aviv University, 2000. / At head of title: Tel-Aviv University, Faculty of Social Sciences, the Department of Political Science. Added cover and abstract in Hebrew. Available also in electronic version. Includes bibliographical references.
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Between house and cityKallus, Rachel Admati January 1982 (has links)
Thesis (M. Arch.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Architecture, 1982. / MICROFICHE COPY AVAILABLE IN ARCHIVES AND ROTCH. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 160-162). / In an attempt to understand the relationships between a residential building type and the city, this thesis explores the quality of the urban context resulting from the assemblage of these buildings. The investigation takes place in North Tel-Aviv and is conducted in three parts: Background and polemic - a discussion of the development of the urban ideas and of the physical form in North Tel-Aviv; The problem - a documentation and analysis of the existing context; and An alternative - a design exploration of a typical neighborhood. / by Rachel Admati Kallus. / M.Arch.
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Le plan de Patrick Geddes pour la "Ville Blanche" de Tel Aviv une part d' ombre et de lumière /Weill-Rochant, Catherine. Cohen, Jean-Louis January 2009 (has links) (PDF)
Reproduction de : Thèse doctorat : Urbanisme : Paris8 : 2006. / Titre provenant de l'écran-titre. Bibliogr. f. 428-462.
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Social exchange: A neighborhood narrative for the Tel Aviv New Central Bus StationJanuary 2018 (has links)
Tel Aviv is a rapidly changing city. Since its establishment only a century ago, the city has developed into an innovation hub, rich with culture and architectural history. Part of its hasty evolution from the land of sand dunes to the current metropolis was the construction of the Tel Aviv New Central Bus Station, the largest bus station in the world at the time of completion. Almost three decades after Israeli Architect Ram Karmi designed the station, it opened in 1993, already nicknamed the “white elephant” due to its scale and lack of integration into the surrounding neighborhood of Neve Sha’anan. The New Central Bus Station never met the architect’s intended vision of “a city under a roof” and has significantly transformed over the years, as an attempt to create purpose within the large mass. Neve Sha’anan, in south Tel Aviv, is the poorest area of the city, ridden with homelessness, prostitution and drug addiction. It is also the home to the majority of the African refugee and asylum seeker community i Israel, making up less than half a percent of the population of the country. The small community has been the target of recent refugee policy reforms, which frame them as “infiltrators” or “labor migrants.” 1 The New Central Bus Station fractures the urban environment of Neve Sha’anan and causes spatial disorientation of a community already faced with cultural marginalization. Through an analysis of the impact that top down decision making causing cultural conflict has on architecture and place making, this thesis sets to develop a solution for intervention, which considers the users and urban context as a source for re-configuring existing infrastructure. / 0 / SPK / specialcollections@tulane.edu
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White City/ Black City : - Hidden in sand / Den vita staden och den svarta staden : - Gömt i sandBorg, Elenita January 2014 (has links)
In january 2013, I travelled with my studio to Israel. This project is a collection of what I experienced on our journey through the country, and the thoughts it evoked. It is also a collection of symbols and metaphors found in the areas we visited. Tel Aviv is widely known as the “White City”. According to the myth, it rose out of the dunes of sand as a new Hebrew city. However, deeper investigation reveals that a part of the municipality is established on the post-Nakba ruins of the former village Manshiya. This village was almost totally erased, partly for political reasons. The project is an exploration into the story of erasure, and an attempt to evoke the traces of what once was there. I have proposed an underground structure hidden in sand. The objective is not to present a final answer, but to contribute to an ongoing discussion of who is the winner or loser in the writing of history, and what role architecture has in this battle.
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The roots of Jehu’s bloody coup : a violent story of religious Zealots, retributive justice or international politics?Mokoena, Lerato Likopo Dinah January 2018 (has links)
The study undertaken in this dissertation developed out of my honors research essay titled “A socio-political view of land acquisition in 1 Kings 21:1-16 as a form of dehumanization.” The previous research essay serves as a precursor for the current
study. Naboth’s loss of his הלחנ (inheritance), resulting in his death under the rule of Ahab,
is considered by scholars as one of the possible roots which served as a basis for Jehu’s coup as retributive justice for Naboth. It is, therefore, the aim of this paper to investigate all the possible roots of Jehu’s coup adopting a holistic approach in explicating all contributing factors and to interrogate the extreme use of violence.
Following the death of Naboth in 1 Kings 21:1-16, and a further mention of Naboth’s death and the acquisition of his vineyard in 2 Kings 9-10, the murder of Naboth prompted and sparked a debate of whether Naboth’s death was avenged as Jehu executed his coup. An investigation into Jehu’s coup opened up more doors of research as it became apparent that many other factors became intertwined with the coup narrative.
The apostasy of the Northern Kingdom also brought an element of idolatry into the scheme. The prophets Elijah and Elisha are introduced into the narrative through the anti- Jezebel redaction to invoke a Yahwism theme. Jehu was then a Yahwistic revolutionary who was being obedient to Yahweh during his bloody extermination of the house of Ahab.
Archaeological evidence (i.e. Tel Dan) would later defy the claims of the narrative as they are presented in the Old Testament, this then led to an investigation and an inquiry of how Jehu is related to all factors tied to him. How is Jehu’s coup related to Tel Dan, Naboth, and the prophetic agenda of Elijah and Elisha? / Dissertation (MTh)--University of Pretoria, 2018. / Old Testament Studies / MTh / Unrestricted
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Rua de mão única: uma leitura do romance Passado Contínuo de Yaakov Shabtai / One hand street: space study in Yaakov Shabtai\'s Past ContinuousJorge, Ligia Nice Luchesi 03 May 2012 (has links)
Yakov Shabtai (1934-1981), escreveu Passado Contínuo A lembrança das coisas, seu primeiro romance, quase trinta anos após a fundação de Israel, que saía de sua terceira guerra em 30 anos de existência. O romance expõe a vida de três homens, suas relações amorosas e familiares, seus projetos e frustrações, relacionando inúmeras outras personagens que afluem e somem ao longo do enredo. Seu cenário e também personagem é Tel Aviv, o qual será analisado sob o viés de Walter Benjamin em suas críticas ao processo de modernização de Paris como capital do século XIX. A hipótese de trabalho é que a mudança no contexto histórico, o póssionismo, entendido como outra elaboração para a história nacional de Israel, exigiu do escritor competente a articulação entre modos de contar mais complexos e questionadores, como uma meta-narrativa a qual influencia a criação de novas técnicas de escrita ficcional para a representação da cidade histórica ficcionalizada. / Yaakov Shabtai (1934-1981), wrote Past Continuous, his first novel, almost thirty years after the foundationof Israel, out of third war in 30 years of its rise. The novel exposes the lives of three men, their relationships and families, their projects and frustrations, showing numerous other characters who flock and disappear over the storyline. His scenario, and also a character, is Tel-Aviv, which will be analyzed under the bias of Walter Benjamin in his criticism on the modernization of Paris as the capital of the nineteenth century. The hypothesis is that the changes in the historical context, post-Zionism, understood as another narrative to the national history of Israel, required the coordination between the competent writer in order to tellmore complex ways and questioning, as a meta-narrative which influences the creation of new techniques of writing so as to represent the city\'s historical into the fictionalized way.
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Rua de mão única: uma leitura do romance Passado Contínuo de Yaakov Shabtai / One hand street: space study in Yaakov Shabtai\'s Past ContinuousLigia Nice Luchesi Jorge 03 May 2012 (has links)
Yakov Shabtai (1934-1981), escreveu Passado Contínuo A lembrança das coisas, seu primeiro romance, quase trinta anos após a fundação de Israel, que saía de sua terceira guerra em 30 anos de existência. O romance expõe a vida de três homens, suas relações amorosas e familiares, seus projetos e frustrações, relacionando inúmeras outras personagens que afluem e somem ao longo do enredo. Seu cenário e também personagem é Tel Aviv, o qual será analisado sob o viés de Walter Benjamin em suas críticas ao processo de modernização de Paris como capital do século XIX. A hipótese de trabalho é que a mudança no contexto histórico, o póssionismo, entendido como outra elaboração para a história nacional de Israel, exigiu do escritor competente a articulação entre modos de contar mais complexos e questionadores, como uma meta-narrativa a qual influencia a criação de novas técnicas de escrita ficcional para a representação da cidade histórica ficcionalizada. / Yaakov Shabtai (1934-1981), wrote Past Continuous, his first novel, almost thirty years after the foundationof Israel, out of third war in 30 years of its rise. The novel exposes the lives of three men, their relationships and families, their projects and frustrations, showing numerous other characters who flock and disappear over the storyline. His scenario, and also a character, is Tel-Aviv, which will be analyzed under the bias of Walter Benjamin in his criticism on the modernization of Paris as the capital of the nineteenth century. The hypothesis is that the changes in the historical context, post-Zionism, understood as another narrative to the national history of Israel, required the coordination between the competent writer in order to tellmore complex ways and questioning, as a meta-narrative which influences the creation of new techniques of writing so as to represent the city\'s historical into the fictionalized way.
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