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A First Circuit: London, Jerusalem, and the Construction of a “Political Context” A First Circuit: London, Jerusalem, and the Construction of a “Political Context”
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What Did the British Know about the Auja River? What Did the British Know about the Auja River?
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Imperial Machines Imperial Machines
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Cite
Abstract
This chapter traces material and human links that enabled the construction of the first electric power-station of Palestine in Jaffa. While the original British concession stipulated the construction of a hydro-electric station, a diesel-fuel station had been built instead. The chapter identifies two overlapping, even competing techno-political ’circuits’ of links that underwrote the process: a Jerusalem-London one and a Tel-Aviv-Berlin one. It shows that technical and commercial considerations were translated into a political context of ’Arab resistance’ to electricity and that this context, in turn, rematerialized in determining the location and technology of the power-house. At the conceptual level, the chapter shows that techno-politics is assembled through gaps between local knowledge and colonial expertise. At the historical level, it shows that Arab resistance to Jewish electricity had been as much a constructed pretext for technical changes as an already-there reality.
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