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The Architecture of Repeated Rituals
This paper examines the relationship between architecture and civil participation by specifically looking at the formal attributes of Rabin Square in Tel Aviv, its development as a public urban space, its nationally symbolic meaning, and its civic role. A major conclusion of this study is that public assembly and the physical space in which it occurs are indivisible, revealing architecture's unique contribution to the shaping of citizenship.
The Architecture of Repeated Rituals
This paper examines the relationship between architecture and civil participation by specifically looking at the formal attributes of Rabin Square in Tel Aviv, its development as a public urban space, its nationally symbolic meaning, and its civic role. A major conclusion of this study is that public assembly and the physical space in which it occurs are indivisible, revealing architecture's unique contribution to the shaping of citizenship.
The Architecture of Repeated Rituals
Hatuka, Tali (author) / Kallus, Rachel (author)
Journal of Architectural Education ; 61 ; 85-94
2008-05-01
10 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
Unknown
The Architecture of Repeated Rituals
Online Contents | 2008
|A History of Architecture: Settings and Rituals
Taylor & Francis Verlag | 1986
|A history of architecture : settings and rituals
TIBKAT | 1985
|Rituals Online : Transferring and Designing Rituals
DataCite | 2006
|