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Postcolonial space(s / edited by Gülsüm Baydar Nalbantoglu and Wong Chong Thai.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublisher: New York : Princeton Architectural Press, [1997]Copyright date: ©1997Description: 139 pages : illustrations ; 23 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 1568980752
  • 9781568980751
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 720.103 21
LOC classification:
  • NA2543.S6 P67 1997
Contents:
Introduction -- The Concept of Regionalism -- (De)forming Self and Other: Towards an Ethics of Distance -- Identity Production in Postcolonial Indian Architecture: Re-Covering What We Never Had -- A House for Josephine Baker -- Re-Surfacing: Architecture, Wayang, and the "Javanese House" -- Limits of (in)Tolerance: The Carved Dwelling in the Architectural and Urban Discourse of Modern Turkey -- Abjection and Architecture: The Migrant House in Multicultural Australia -- Cacophony: Gratification or Innovation.
Summary: "The postcolonial world is currently undergoing rapid development and dramatic change. Radical interventions are drastically altering the physical landscape of these regions, resulting in new and unfamiliar environments. While these changes employ the most current structural technologies, building types, and planning ideals, the critical discourse used to analyze these developments continues to focus on traditional dualities such as West/non-West, modern/traditional, and global/regional.The eight essays in this collection aspire to explore new languages for rethinking contemporary architectural and urban conditions in the postcolonial world. In so doing, the authors challenge the convictions central to most studies of non-western architecture--that is, the pursuit of essential singular identities and the glorification of immemorial pasts. Each essay investigates a particular textual, architectural, or urban site within larger concerns related to the postcolonial condition. Topics include rereading Beatriz Colomina's text on Adolf Loos's house for Josephine Baker; analyzing political and ethical aspects of Jean Nouvel's Arab World Institute, and exposing the cacophony of Pacific Rim cities. For all those interested in the present-and future-global environment, Postcolonial Spaces is an important exploration."--Publisher description.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book City Campus City Campus Main Collection 720.103 POS (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available A145264B

"The eight essays in this collection aspire to explore new languages for rethinking contemporary architectural and urban conditions in the postcolonial world.".

Includes bibliographical references.

Introduction -- The Concept of Regionalism -- (De)forming Self and Other: Towards an Ethics of Distance -- Identity Production in Postcolonial Indian Architecture: Re-Covering What We Never Had -- A House for Josephine Baker -- Re-Surfacing: Architecture, Wayang, and the "Javanese House" -- Limits of (in)Tolerance: The Carved Dwelling in the Architectural and Urban Discourse of Modern Turkey -- Abjection and Architecture: The Migrant House in Multicultural Australia -- Cacophony: Gratification or Innovation.

"The postcolonial world is currently undergoing rapid development and dramatic change. Radical interventions are drastically altering the physical landscape of these regions, resulting in new and unfamiliar environments. While these changes employ the most current structural technologies, building types, and planning ideals, the critical discourse used to analyze these developments continues to focus on traditional dualities such as West/non-West, modern/traditional, and global/regional.The eight essays in this collection aspire to explore new languages for rethinking contemporary architectural and urban conditions in the postcolonial world. In so doing, the authors challenge the convictions central to most studies of non-western architecture--that is, the pursuit of essential singular identities and the glorification of immemorial pasts. Each essay investigates a particular textual, architectural, or urban site within larger concerns related to the postcolonial condition. Topics include rereading Beatriz Colomina's text on Adolf Loos's house for Josephine Baker; analyzing political and ethical aspects of Jean Nouvel's Arab World Institute, and exposing the cacophony of Pacific Rim cities. For all those interested in the present-and future-global environment, Postcolonial Spaces is an important exploration."--Publisher description.

Machine converted from AACR2 source record.

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