Deadline: 30 April 2019
Open to: postgraduate students in history, art history, cultural studies, and the social sciences, as well as young architects and urban planners
Venue: 23 – 27 September 2019 in Tel Aviv, Israel
Founded as a suburb of Jaffa, Tel Aviv has evolved by the mid-1930s to become the most prominent city of the Jewish citizenry of Palestine under the British Mandate and that due to an influx of immigrants coming mostly from Eastern and Central Europe in search of a safe haven from anti-semitic policies. Graduates of the Bauhaus and similar schools in Europe have supplied the demand for housing and urban development in the rapidly developing city. Jaffa, remaining the leading city of the Arab citizenry, also boasted the International Style of that time, but to a lesser extent, it was less conspicuous against the backdrop of the previously built environment. Such was the case with neighborhoods in Jerusalem, Palestine's capital, and in Haifa, the main port and heavy industry center. Tel Aviv was distinctive in its ensemble of an almost complete urban fabric based on a master plan of a Garden City in conjunction with its International Style built environment. Nowadays, approximately 4,000 International Style buildings, set into the Garden City urban planning, form part of the UNESCO proclaimed World Heritage Site under the appellation of "White City of Tel Aviv: The Modern Movement."
Since 2003 the ZEIT-Stiftung Ebelin und Gerd Bucerius has invited young historians and social scientists (usually postgraduate students) to take part in studies programs in various locations. The Gerda Henkel Foundation is the program partner since 2009. This year, in cooperation with the White City Center (WCC), it will focus on the concept of 'Societies on the Move'; i.e. the movement of people, materials, and cultures as a central element of modern architecture and this element's influence on the urban landscape. The Summer School wishes to explore historical and contemporary relationships through representations of identities, examining how migration and mobility affect individuals, cities, and cultures while reshaping their identities. It will address, inter alia, the following questions: How do migration and mobility affect the inhabitants, the city and their culture? What did the Bauhaus in Tel Aviv-Jaffa and Israel stand for at its inception and what does it stand for today? What is the relevance of Bauhaus for contemporary demands of the city's inhabitants and its sojourners? How can this heritage be adapted to today‘s needs? How to secure its conservation and enable restoration?
ZEIT-Stiftung Ebelin und Gerd Bucerius, Dr. Anna Hofmann Feldbrunnenstrasse 56, 20148 Hamburg Germany : Germanyhofmann@zeit-stiftung.de.
The official web-page.
source post
Open to: postgraduate students in history, art history, cultural studies, and the social sciences, as well as young architects and urban planners
Venue: 23 – 27 September 2019 in Tel Aviv, Israel
Description
The year 2019 in Germany is dedicated to the celebration of the centennial of the Bauhaus movement. In particular, Weimar, Dessau, and Berlin will hold a series of events in connection with this anniversary. The city of Tel Aviv-Jaffa will also be represented in these events on account of its center's unique fabric founded on the architectural style adhered to by the Bauhaus school. In the same vein, the ZEIT-Stiftung Ebelin und Gerd Bucerius and the Gerda Henkel Foundation will hold from 23 until 27 September 2019 the interdisciplinary program "History Takes Place – Dynamics of Urban Change“ in Tel Aviv-Jaffa focusing on its Bauhaus heritage.Founded as a suburb of Jaffa, Tel Aviv has evolved by the mid-1930s to become the most prominent city of the Jewish citizenry of Palestine under the British Mandate and that due to an influx of immigrants coming mostly from Eastern and Central Europe in search of a safe haven from anti-semitic policies. Graduates of the Bauhaus and similar schools in Europe have supplied the demand for housing and urban development in the rapidly developing city. Jaffa, remaining the leading city of the Arab citizenry, also boasted the International Style of that time, but to a lesser extent, it was less conspicuous against the backdrop of the previously built environment. Such was the case with neighborhoods in Jerusalem, Palestine's capital, and in Haifa, the main port and heavy industry center. Tel Aviv was distinctive in its ensemble of an almost complete urban fabric based on a master plan of a Garden City in conjunction with its International Style built environment. Nowadays, approximately 4,000 International Style buildings, set into the Garden City urban planning, form part of the UNESCO proclaimed World Heritage Site under the appellation of "White City of Tel Aviv: The Modern Movement."
Since 2003 the ZEIT-Stiftung Ebelin und Gerd Bucerius has invited young historians and social scientists (usually postgraduate students) to take part in studies programs in various locations. The Gerda Henkel Foundation is the program partner since 2009. This year, in cooperation with the White City Center (WCC), it will focus on the concept of 'Societies on the Move'; i.e. the movement of people, materials, and cultures as a central element of modern architecture and this element's influence on the urban landscape. The Summer School wishes to explore historical and contemporary relationships through representations of identities, examining how migration and mobility affect individuals, cities, and cultures while reshaping their identities. It will address, inter alia, the following questions: How do migration and mobility affect the inhabitants, the city and their culture? What did the Bauhaus in Tel Aviv-Jaffa and Israel stand for at its inception and what does it stand for today? What is the relevance of Bauhaus for contemporary demands of the city's inhabitants and its sojourners? How can this heritage be adapted to today‘s needs? How to secure its conservation and enable restoration?
Eligibility
The Summer School invites applications particularly from postgraduate students in history, art history, cultural studies, and the social sciences, as well as young architects and urban planners. Applicants should have a genuine interest in an interdisciplinary exchange on the history of the city and city development. Participants should have a specialization associated with Tel Aviv-Jaffa, Israel and the Middle East as well as a keen thematic and methodological interest in urban studies. Sessions will be held in English. Applicants are expected to prepare for the sessions with course materials and reading lists in order to be able to give a presentation on a set topic related to their academic interests and competencies.Cost
Travel and accommodation expenses will be covered by the organizers.Application
Please send your application together with a statement of interest, CV and suggested presentation topic (max. 2 pages) to the following address:ZEIT-Stiftung Ebelin und Gerd Bucerius, Dr. Anna Hofmann Feldbrunnenstrasse 56, 20148 Hamburg Germany : Germanyhofmann@zeit-stiftung.de.
The official web-page.
source post
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