As oil-rich countries in the Middle East are increasingly associated with soaring skyscrapers and modern architecture, attention is being diverted away from the pervasive struggles of social housing in those same urban settings. Social Housing in the Middle East traces the history of social housing―both gleaming postmodern projects and bare-bones urban housing structures―in an effort to provide a wider understanding of marginalized spaces and their impact on identities, communities, and class. While architects may have envisioned utopian or futuristic experiments, these buildings were often constructed with the knowledge and skill sets of local workers, and the housing was in turn adapted to suit the modern needs of residents. This tension between local needs and national aspirations are linked to issues of global importance, including security, migration, and refugee resettlement. The essays collected here consider how culture, faith, and politics influenced the solutions offered by social housing; they provide an insightful look at how social housing has evolved since the 19th century and how it will need to adapt to suit the 21st.
Author(s): Kvanç Klnç, Mohammad Gharipour
Publisher: Indiana University Press
Year: 2019
Language: English
Pages: 336
City: Bloomington
Cover
Title
Copyright
Contents
1. Introduction: Global Modernity and Marginalized Histories of Social Housing in the Middle East
Part I: Settings of Social Housing: Politics, Agency, and Social Reform
2. Legitimizing the Jordanian State through Social Housing
3. Workers’ and Popular Housing in Mid-Twentieth-Century Egypt
4. Neoliberal Islamism and the Cultural Politics of Housing in Turkey
Part II: Histories of Social Housing: Identity, Nation, and Beyond
5. Constructing Dignity: Primitivist Discourses and the Spatial Economies of Development in Postcolonial Tunisia
6. Nation-Building in Israel: Negotiations over Housing as Grounds for the State-Citizen Contract, 1948–53
7. Social Housing in Colonial Cyprus: Contestations on Urbanity and Domesticity
8. Constructed Marginality: Women, Public Housing, and National Identity in Kuwait
Part III: Design and Construction: Transnational Systems and Localized Practices
9. Rabbis, Architects, and the Design of Ultra-Orthodox City-Settlements
10. Notions of Class and Culture in Housing Projects in Tehran, 1945–60
11. Discrepant Spatial Practices: Contemporary Social Housing Projects in İzmir
Index