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E-book: Architecture as Cultural and Political Discourse: Case studies of conceptual norms and aesthetic practices

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This book is concerned with cultural and political discourses that affect the production of architecture. It examines how these discursive mechanisms and technologies combine to normalise and aestheticise everyday practices. It queries the means by which buildings are appropriated to give shape and form to political aspirations and values. Architecture is not overtly political. It does not coerce people to behave in certain ways. However, architecture is constructed within the same rules and practices whereby people and communities self-govern and regulate themselves to think and act in certain ways. This book seeks to examine these rules through various case studies including: the reconstructed Notre Dame Cathedral, the Nazi era Munich Konigsplatz, Auschwitz concentration camp and the Prora resort, Sydney’s suburban race riots, and the Australian Immigration Detention Centre on Christmas Island.

List of figures
ix
Preface x
Acknowledgments xi
1 Architecture as cultural and political discourse
1(22)
Culture
5(5)
Politics
10(2)
Architecture
12(3)
Aestheticisation
15(8)
2 Meaning and the death of architecture
23(33)
`This will kill that'
24(2)
The gargoyle in architecture
26(7)
The `spirit' of the age
33(6)
Legibility and the architectural (con)text
39(5)
The book and the building: the libraries of Labrouste and Perrault
44(12)
3 Statements on architecture: meaning and determinism in the Athens Charters
56(32)
The politics of the Athens Charters
57(10)
The hermeneutics of continuity
67(5)
The Declaration of Dresden
72(5)
Architecture and the statement
77(11)
4 Aesthetics and politics: the building of Nazi Germany
88(26)
Nazi `evil' and the `ordinary'
89(3)
Neo-classicism and National Socialism
92(3)
Words in stone
95(4)
The Konigplatz
99(3)
`Denazification'
102(4)
Culpability
106(8)
5 The camp and the resort: exclusion and inclusion associated with `bare life'
114(28)
The zone of indistinction
115(6)
Volkloser Raum
121(4)
The Nuremberg Law
125(6)
Strength through Joy
131(4)
`Ethica more Auschwitz demonstrata'
135(7)
6 Spatial contestation and suburban riots
142(25)
Territory and belonging: the Cronulla riots
143(4)
Australian ugliness and the myth of the bush
147(6)
Social exclusion: Macquarie Fields
153(5)
Disaffected locals: Redfern
158(4)
Making up the nation
162(5)
7 The architecture of indefinite and mandatory detention
167(21)
The grey zone
168(4)
The stateless individual
172(3)
Sovereign power and `the state of exception'
175(4)
Managing Australia's borders: inside Woomera
179(9)
8 Architecture and ethics: competition for the Christmas Island detention centre
188(18)
Creating' limbo land'
188(4)
Island detention
192(4)
Architecture and ethics
196(4)
From `white elephant' to `breaking point'
200(6)
9 Apparatus
206(5)
Conclusion
206(5)
Index 211
Daniel Grinceri is a practicing architect in Perth, Western Australia. He recently received his PhD on this topic from the University of Western Australia.