Space, Kinship and Gender (ص 160)
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- Space, Kinship and Gender (ص 160)
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                        Fige4.4060:3 A general view of the lower quarter
 collectively identified --and they referred to themselves--as the
 fallaheen of the lower quarter.
 Be The heterogenious lineage of the lower quarter helps to explain
 the spatially defined character of this quarter. Unlike both the
 Barghouthi and Shu'aibi quarters which had strong external boundaries
 defining their compounds as a whole (e.g. back of buildings, empty
 lots, etc., and more significantly, defined and controlled entrances
 to the harah), the lower quarter had no such defined entrances to
 control outsiders. Internal boundaries which seperated the different
 descent groups were thus more important than external boundaries
 separating them (the fallaheen) from the rest of the village as was
 the case with the Shu'aibis.
 3. As figure 4.4/7 iluustrated the lower quarter consisted of a
 number of separate compounds belonging to the different descent
 groups: while the Rabi and ‘Adi compounds were adjacent to one
 another--expressing their social cohesiveness, enhanced by inter-
 marriage--the Nasir compound was facing away from the Rabi and ‘Adi
 compounds.
 ae The Rabi clan occupied a number of compounds. The main Rabi
 compound (fig-4.48 ) had an enclosed courtyard with a number of
 single family houses around it. The Rabi clan occupied another two
 adjacent compounds. A number of single family houses located adjacent
 to one another formed a TOW of houses, each with a small semi-private
 frontyard. However the road which was constructed in 1975 past
 through these frontyards, hence leaving the row of houses open
 149
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