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Modernism's Magic Hat: Architecture and the Illusion of Development Without Capital [Kõva köide]

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Examines the role of architecture in the history of global development and decolonization.

In Modernism’s Magic Hat, Ijlal Muzaffar examines how modern architects and planners help resolve one of the central dilemmas of the mid-twentieth century world order: how to make decolonization plausible without accounting for centuries of capital drain under colonial rule. In the years after World War II, architects and planners found extensive opportunities in new international institutions—such as the World Bank, the UN, and the Ford Foundation—and helped shape new models of global intervention that displaced the burden of change onto the inhabitants. Muzaffar argues that architecture in this domain didn’t just symbolically represent power, but formed the material domain through which new modes of power acquired sense. Looking at a series of architectural projects across the world, from housing in Ghana to village planning in Nigeria and urban planning in Venezuela and Pakistan, Muzaffar explores how architects and planners shaped new ideas of time, land, climate, and the decolonizing body, making them appear as sources of untapped value. What resulted, Muzaffar argues, is a widespread belief in spontaneous Third World “development” without capital, which continues to foreclose any global discussion of colonial theft.



Examines the role of architecture in the history of global development and decolonization.
Introduction. Soft Bricks, Hard Mortar of Immanence: Thinking through
Other Figurations of Architecture in Development
Part I: Risk/Belief

Chapter
1. House without a Core: Capturing Intent in Ghana
Chapter
2. God's Gamble: Self-Help Architecture and the Housing of Risk


Part II: Borders/Open-Endedness

Chapter
3. Boundary Games: Military Rule, International Experts, and the
Aesthetics of Incompletion in Pakistan
Chapter
4. "Settlers Welcome": Designing the Infinite Present, from Pakistan
to the Philippines
Chapter 5 Fuzzy Planning: MIT, Harvard, and the Image of Planning in
Venezuela


Part III: Materiality/Depth

Chapter
6. Landing Architecture: Bodies and Land in Transition in the Gold
Coast
Chapter
7. Tropics of Shame: Fry, Drew, and the Designing of Depth
Chapter
8. Counting Quality: Locating Patterns of Change, from Geddes to
Koolhaas


Acknowledgments
Notes
Index
Ijlal Muzaffar is a professor of modern architectural history at the Rhode Island School of Design and is the coeditor of Architecture in Development: Systems and the Emergence of the Global South.