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E-raamat: Icon Project: Architecture, Cities, and Capitalist Globalization

(Professor Emeritus of Sociology, London School of Economics and Political Science)
  • Formaat: 336 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 27-Feb-2017
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press Inc
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780190464202
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  • Formaat: 336 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 27-Feb-2017
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press Inc
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780190464202

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In the last quarter century, a new form of "iconic" architecture has appeared throughout the major cities of the world. Typically designed by globe-trotting "starchitects" along with a few leading international architectural firms, these massive edifices are almost always funded through private capital and intended for transnational firms. This represents a sharp turn from the era stretching from the mid-nineteenth to the mid-twentieth century, in which signature buildings were more often than not built to house state institutions and publicly funded. What does this shift in architectural priority tell us about the larger global forces at work?
In The Icon Project, the eminent sociologist Leslie Sklair, originator of the "transnational capitalist class" concept in the 1980s, provides a tour d'horizon of contemporary architecture, ranging from the financial capitals of the global North to the megacities of the global South to the petro-cities of the Gulf States. The spectacular skyscrapers that now populate these various urban forms are almost always the products of global architectural firms featuring brand-name architects, but in Sklair's reading they are more than just buildings-they are masks for the larger processes that have transformed capitalism in recent decades. Namely, the private sector has obtained power at the expense of the state throughout the world, and we are now roughly three-plus decades into the neoliberal era. Both increasing inequality and hyperconsumerism are intrinsic features of this regime, the representational form of which is in near-perfect accord with these trends. Sklair traces how the iconic buildings of our era-elaborate shopping malls, spectacular museums designed by the likes of Frank Gehry, ever-higher skyscrapers, and vast urban megaprojects-constitute the triumphal "Icon Project" of contemporary global capitalism. Such icons match with the tastes and preferences of the transnational capitalist class, whose ideology is put into concrete form by the web of architects and firms enlisted in the project. In Sklair's view, the transnational capitalist class has mobilized two distinct but related forms of iconic architecture-unique icons (buildings recognized as works of art in their own right) and successful typical icons (buildings copying elements of unique icons)-to promote their root ideological message: the culture-ideology of consumerism.
Until now, there has been no one book that explains the connection between the social production of iconic architecture, its central role in globalizing cities (namely, cities aspiring to global status), and the broader transformation of capitalism. Sklair's trenchant thesis-that the Icon Project is an important weapon in the struggle to solidify capitalist hegemony as well as reinforce transnational capitalist control of where we live, what we consume, and how we think-will surely be controversial, but it also promises to reshape the core debates within contemporary urban studies.

Arvustused

Leslie Sklair has produced an elegantly written, wide-ranging exploration of that over-used and under-examined totem of our times, the icon. The Icon Project deconstructs the seductive image of power that rises from the uneasy depths of transnational capitalism and global consumer culture to symbolize both modern desire and social control -- this is a masterful work of political-economic critique and architectural analysis. * Sharon Zukin, author of Naked City: The Death and Life of Authentic Urban Places * This book ought to be required reading for my generation. A great tough survey -- crucially from outside the architectural world -- which manages to show us the huge shiny, lumpen shape of the transnational development Utopia we've come to accept as inevitable. Most of all, it shows just how even the best architects and architecture have become 'enthusiastic partners' in the global project of turning the whole way we treat the world into a form of development opportunity and corporate entertainment. A gripping read, as well as a very, very scary one. There's never been a bigger need for architects to use all their other skills to think about how to design us out of this place. * Kester Rattenbury, Professor of Architecture, University of Westminster * In this masterfully sweeping survey of the leading architects of our times ... Sklair dares to situate the undisputed creativity and genius of distinguished architectural icons in the context of capitalist dynamics that sustain and privilege the demand for ever more wildly ambitious designs. With a sociologist's understanding of power and the commercial requisites associated with globalization, a comparative-historical appreciation for developmental context, and an activist's social sensibilities clearly on his mind, Leslie Sklair reveals the utopian and dystopian elements of modern design practice. Readers may not fully agree with all his stringent critiques, but they will embrace his search for an alternative aesthetics of urban design and city-building, even as they continue to ponder how individual virtuoso can be disassociated from the larger consumption dynamics that brand architectural projects as iconic. * Diane E. Davis, Harvard Graduate School of Design * Leslie Sklair's sociological perspective on iconic architecture surveys conditions under which it has emerged and the social and political demands to which it responds. This is a deeply informative account and at times a cautionary tale. * Denise Scott Brown, VSB Architects *

List of Figures
vii
List of Tables
ix
Acknowledgements xi
Introduction 1(8)
The Argument
4(1)
Sources
5(2)
Structure of the Book
7(2)
1 Iconic Architecture and Capitalist Globalization
9(44)
Architecture, Power, Aesthetics
11(4)
The Icon: History and Theory of an Idea
15(11)
Iconic for When
26(7)
Iconic for Whom
33(7)
Iconic for Where
40(13)
2 Two Types of Iconic Architecture: Unique and Typical
53(24)
The Rise of Iconic Architecture
53(4)
Iconicity Claims of Top Firms
57(5)
Starchitects and Signature Architects
62(7)
Architecture Theme Parks and Other Iconic Projects
69(8)
3 The Architecture Industry and Typical Icons
77(34)
The Sociology of Architecture
77(6)
The Architecture Industry in the New Millennium
83(10)
Successful Typical Icons
93(2)
Celebrity Infrastructure
95(1)
Bridges and Tunnels
96(6)
Transportation Infrastructure
102(5)
Water-Based Infrastructure
107(4)
4 Corporate Starchitects and Unique Icons
111(39)
Frank Lloyd Wright and the Frank Lloyd Wright Industry
112(6)
Le Corbusier and the Corb Industry
118(4)
The Rise of the Starchitects
122(7)
Frank Gehry (Home Office Los Angeles)
129(4)
Norman Foster (Home Office London)
133(6)
Rem Koolhaas (Home Office Rotterdam)
139(5)
Zaha Hadid (Home Office London)
144(6)
5 The Politics of Iconic Architecture
150(44)
Architectural Iconicity and Identities
154(11)
Politics and the Architecture of Transnational Social Spaces
165(5)
Iconic Architecture in Urban Megaprojects
170(8)
Paris: The Ongoing Saga of the Grands Projets
178(5)
China: The Biggest Urban Megaproject in Human History
183(11)
6 Architects as Professionals and Ideologues
194(31)
The Criticality Debate
198(2)
Third World Modernism and Postcolonialisms
200(7)
Postcolonialist Understandings of Architecture
207(4)
Disney, China, and India
211(9)
Sustainability, Human Rights, and the Architect's Place in Society
220(5)
7 Architecture and the Culture-Ideology of Consumerism
225(30)
Consumerist Space in the City of Capitalist Globalization
226(7)
Architecture, Consumerism, and the Media
233(3)
Iconic Architecture and Shopping
236(7)
Performance Spaces
243(8)
Displacement
251(4)
8 Architecture, Cities, and Alternative Globalizations
255(12)
Appendix: Interview Codes 267(2)
Notes 269(24)
Bibliography 293(26)
Index 319
Leslie Sklair is Professor Emeritus of Sociology at the London School of Economics. He is also the author of The Transnational Capitalist Class and Globalization: Capitalism and its Alternatives.