Copyright Intellect Ltd 2019
Not for distribution
Copyright Intellect Ltd 2019
Not for distribution
337
IJIA 9 (2) pp. 337–360 Intellect Limited 2020
International Journal of Islamic Architecture
Volume 9 Number 2
© 2020 Intellect Ltd DiT Papers. English language. doi: https://doi.org/10.1386/ijia_00017_1
YAEL ALLWEIL AND KEREN BEN HILELL
Technion – Israel Institute of Technology
Conducting Research on West Bank
Settlements: Architecture as Punctum
and Archive
Abstract
Conducting research on Israel’s settlement project has become increasingly diffi-
cult throughout the past decade due to restrictions on public access to both the field
and archives, including those of contemporary planning data. Meanwhile, scholars
and activists have continued to document the spatial implications of settlements
by diversifying their methods, including using architecture as forensic evidence
of political aggression. In response, those who regulate access to archives and the
field have focused on obfuscating information that could corroborate the illegality
of settlements. This has led to a cyclical process in which the exposure of informa-
tion and data has prompted the creation of further barriers to the field. Deep gaps
in formal, authoritative data require methodological creativity and flexibility, such
as reading the built environment itself as a primary source. Borrowing from Roland
Barthes, this article points to the transgressive potential of architecture as a punc-
tum, a point that opens research to multiple interpretations and helps researchers
circumvent restrictions imposed by those regulating access to primary material. In
this case study, we show how limited access to archival data has led researchers to
study pre-approved settlement planning documents and settler-produced documen-
tary clips, interweaving field and archive in meaningful ways. We argue that, by
taking such an approach, researchers may transcend not only issues of access but
also traditional boundaries of disciplines.
Scholars and the general public alike have critically discussed the architec-
ture and planning of settlements as structural violence in the context of the
Israeli–Palestinian conflict. Eyal Weizman, Oren Yiftachel, Neve Gordon, and
Keywords
architectural history
settlements
Israel-Palestine
research
methods
West Bank
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