Plantation: Modern-Vernacular Housing and Settlement in Ottoman Palestine, 1858-1918

The Palestinian vernacular is a key site for evaluating the messy dynamics between modern and vernacular architecture, suggesting a need for the re-conceptualization of the social and political implications of “vernacular” and its uses in historiography. This article explores the relationship betwee...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Yael Allweil
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Institut National d'Histoire de l'Art
Series:ABE Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/abe/10894
_version_ 1797305651890749440
author Yael Allweil
author_facet Yael Allweil
author_sort Yael Allweil
collection DOAJ
description The Palestinian vernacular is a key site for evaluating the messy dynamics between modern and vernacular architecture, suggesting a need for the re-conceptualization of the social and political implications of “vernacular” and its uses in historiography. This article explores the relationship between vernacular and modern dwelling environments by conducting close architectural analysis of certain key examples in Palestine following the Ottoman land modernization of 1858. The modernization of land ownership, cultivation, and registration produced a new built environment of wealth extraction and peasant dispossession that I identify here as “plantation.” Focusing inquiry on Acre and Jaffa’s plantation landscape, I examine rural mansions together with “back of the big house” worker dwellings and agricultural structures, which were all part and parcel of this landscape of extraction. I examine the architectural history of the Mazra’a and Hammed plantations and identify two housing forms as alterations of Palestine’s traditional-vernacular architecture: serf hut and landlord mansion. I show that plantation dwellings, created from the 1860s onwards, involved a change to construction methods and building materials found on-site or imported, and resulted in single-standing structures in campus settlement layout, where mud huts and multi-room mansions distinguished serfs from landlords. The plantation decomposition of the courtyard house typology produced a modern-vernacular built environment, calling into question the Manichean divide between “modern” and “vernacular” as two distinct and opposing frameworks. Pointing to the plantation as a modern vernacular—rather than aboriginal—typology, this article identifies the plantation as the materialization of the fragmentation of Palestinian society by modernity, a dynamic producing two opposing Palestinian national archetypes: a landed elite nationalism aiming to replace the Ottoman Empire, and a movement for land reform for dispossessed local peasants.
first_indexed 2024-03-08T00:29:03Z
format Article
id doaj.art-c85b8f50ef124e7e8aa977d6b7e98c5b
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2275-6639
language deu
last_indexed 2024-03-08T00:29:03Z
publisher Institut National d'Histoire de l'Art
record_format Article
series ABE Journal
spelling doaj.art-c85b8f50ef124e7e8aa977d6b7e98c5b2024-02-15T14:00:27ZdeuInstitut National d'Histoire de l'ArtABE Journal2275-6639910.4000/abe.10894Plantation: Modern-Vernacular Housing and Settlement in Ottoman Palestine, 1858-1918Yael AllweilThe Palestinian vernacular is a key site for evaluating the messy dynamics between modern and vernacular architecture, suggesting a need for the re-conceptualization of the social and political implications of “vernacular” and its uses in historiography. This article explores the relationship between vernacular and modern dwelling environments by conducting close architectural analysis of certain key examples in Palestine following the Ottoman land modernization of 1858. The modernization of land ownership, cultivation, and registration produced a new built environment of wealth extraction and peasant dispossession that I identify here as “plantation.” Focusing inquiry on Acre and Jaffa’s plantation landscape, I examine rural mansions together with “back of the big house” worker dwellings and agricultural structures, which were all part and parcel of this landscape of extraction. I examine the architectural history of the Mazra’a and Hammed plantations and identify two housing forms as alterations of Palestine’s traditional-vernacular architecture: serf hut and landlord mansion. I show that plantation dwellings, created from the 1860s onwards, involved a change to construction methods and building materials found on-site or imported, and resulted in single-standing structures in campus settlement layout, where mud huts and multi-room mansions distinguished serfs from landlords. The plantation decomposition of the courtyard house typology produced a modern-vernacular built environment, calling into question the Manichean divide between “modern” and “vernacular” as two distinct and opposing frameworks. Pointing to the plantation as a modern vernacular—rather than aboriginal—typology, this article identifies the plantation as the materialization of the fragmentation of Palestinian society by modernity, a dynamic producing two opposing Palestinian national archetypes: a landed elite nationalism aiming to replace the Ottoman Empire, and a movement for land reform for dispossessed local peasants.https://journals.openedition.org/abe/10894vernacular architecturemodernismhousingplantationland modernization
spellingShingle Yael Allweil
Plantation: Modern-Vernacular Housing and Settlement in Ottoman Palestine, 1858-1918
ABE Journal
vernacular architecture
modernism
housing
plantation
land modernization
title Plantation: Modern-Vernacular Housing and Settlement in Ottoman Palestine, 1858-1918
title_full Plantation: Modern-Vernacular Housing and Settlement in Ottoman Palestine, 1858-1918
title_fullStr Plantation: Modern-Vernacular Housing and Settlement in Ottoman Palestine, 1858-1918
title_full_unstemmed Plantation: Modern-Vernacular Housing and Settlement in Ottoman Palestine, 1858-1918
title_short Plantation: Modern-Vernacular Housing and Settlement in Ottoman Palestine, 1858-1918
title_sort plantation modern vernacular housing and settlement in ottoman palestine 1858 1918
topic vernacular architecture
modernism
housing
plantation
land modernization
url https://journals.openedition.org/abe/10894
work_keys_str_mv AT yaelallweil plantationmodernvernacularhousingandsettlementinottomanpalestine18581918