Introduction
1. Contextualizing Sacred Places in Israel/Palestine:
Ethnocracy, Colonization and Decolonization.
2. Embodying the Sacred and the Body in Sacred Places.
3. Sacred Sites in Rural Communities.
4. Sacred Sites and the Right to the City.
5. Decolonizing the City: Claiming Sacred Places in a Mixed
Israeli City.
6. Glocalizing the Sacred: Moving to the National and
Beyond.
Conclusions.
Bibliography
Index
A study of the socio-political dimensions of sacred sites in Israel-Palestine, drawing on over 20 years of in-depth ethnographic research.
Nimrod Luz is Head of the Research Authority at Kinneret College on the Sea of Galilee, Israel.
This book is theoretically grounded, empirically original, and
spans multiple domains of interest. It engages with ideas, and will
be of interest to scholars, from across the humanities and social
sciences. Each chapter does an excellent job of first introducing
key theoretical debates, and how they have evolved over the years,
before weaving in the author’s own theoretical interventions and
empirical material.
*Orlando Wood, Associate Professor of Geography, Singapore
Management University, Singapore*
This is an impressive traverse across theoretical literatures about
sacred space, drawing from multi-disciplinary literatures. Nimrod
Luz’s many years of deep and careful empirical research
demonstrates how the sacred intersects deeply and in complex ways
with myriad dimensions of political, social and economic life.
While applying existing theoretical positions to his specific study
contexts, he also interrogates and challenges received wisdom as a
consequence, taking account of historical and geographical
specificities.
*Lily Kong, President, Singapore Management University,
Singapore*
Blending geography with ethnography, history with contemporary
politics, Luz provides an illuminating and engaging portrait of
contested holy spaces in Israel-Palestine; but he also presents us
with a challenging larger vision as he reflects on scale,
spatiality and the sacred in assessing possibilities for
constructing alternative imaginings of the socio-political away
from the scrutiny of the state.
*Simon Coleman, author of Powers of Pilgrimage: Religion in a World
of Motion*
A stimulating, multidisciplinary exploration of space, place and
scale which draws on both key theoretical perspectives and deep
ethnographic knowledge to show how sacred places can provide arenas
where minorities are able to develop alternative visions of society
and politics.
*John Eade, Professor of Sociology and Anthropology, University of
Roehampton, UK*
In this excellent book Nimrod Luz sheds new light on religion as a
major part of ethnocratic politics. Using a range of critical
theoretical angles, Luz takes us on a fascinating tour of sacred
Israel/Palestine and exposes the omnipotent nexus between power,
identity, sacredness and space. This is a major contribution to
understanding religion as a key player in shaping space and society
in the 21st century.
*Oren Yiftachel, Professor of Geography and Environmental
Development, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel*
This work in particular fills in a great gap in scholarship related
to Islamic religious sites and politics.
*ID: International Dialogue*
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