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Selling space and time : the case of sejjieh dekorattiv

Abstract

Sometime during the late 1980's, the weathered stones from dismantled or collapsed dry-stone walls started being gathered, and their outer surfaces were sawn away in laminae about an inch thick. Such laminae, weathered and rugged on one side, freshly cut and smooth on the other, were then glued side by side to the facades of newly-built houses. The neatly cut, white limestone ashlar masonry in which these facades, like most buildings in Malta, had been raised, was concealed beneath the collage of darkened and irregularly shaped slices of rubble. At first glance, the areas treated in this way had been transformed into a rubble wall. Ethnographic research has been conducted in San Gwann, a suburban village and Rabat, a small town. Several streets were explored in these localities in order to obtain some understanding of the distribution of sejjieh dekorattiv throughout the village or town, paying close attention to the role it plays in the context of particular facades. Fifteen informal interviews were carried out with a number of home-owners, aimed at eliciting their perceptions of sejjieh dekorattiv. This article is the first result of an ongoing research project. Important issues, such as the trends which emerge from the overall distribution of sejjieh dekorattiv throughout Malta as a whole have not as yet been tackled. The observations which follow must not be seen as definitive. They should rather be seen as an attempt to initiate discussion and investigation of this issue.peer-reviewe

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