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E-raamat: Spatial Perspectives: Essays on Literature and Architecture

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This interdisciplinary collection explores the dynamic relationship between literature and architecture from the mid-nineteenth century to the present. Contributions take the reader on a journey through unexplored byways, from Istanbul to New York to London, from event spaces to domestic interiors to the fictional buildings of the novel.
Topics include the building of imaginary spaces, such as the architectural models of comic book worlds created by the cartoonist Seth and the Museum of Innocence by Orhan Pamuk, which is both novel and building. Real architectural spaces are recontextualized through literature: reading the work of Louis Kahn through his personal library and envisioning the writing haven of James Baldwin through his novels. Another approach links literary style with architectural form, as in the work of the New York School poets, who reformulate the built environment on the page. Architectural landmarks like Robert Stevenson’s Roundhouse (1847), Joseph Paxton’s Crystal Palace for the Great Exhibition and the 2012 Olympic Park are reconsidered as counter-narratives of postcolonialism and empire, and the New York skyline is examined alongside literature and visual culture.
This collection demonstrates the reciprocal exchange that exists between the disciplines of literature and architecture and promotes new ways of understanding these interactions.

This interdisciplinary collection explores the dynamic relationship between literature and architecture from the mid-nineteenth century to the present. Topics include the building of imaginary spaces in literature, links between literary style and architectural form, and the reading of architectural landmarks like the Great Exhibition of 1851.
List of Illustrations
vii
Introduction 1(4)
Terri Mullholl
Nicole Sierra
PART I Urban Landscapes: Text and Image
5(48)
Tall Stories: New York Skyscrapers in Art and Literature
7(10)
Douglas Tallack
Comics and the Architecture of Nostalgia: Seth's Dominion City
17(36)
Julian Ferraro
PART II Architecture as National Literary Event
53(68)
Crystallizing Visions: Glass Architecture in Utopian Literature before and after 1851
55(24)
Nathaniel Robert Walker
To the Roundhouse: Returning London Psychogeography
79(22)
Henderson Downing
Literature and Distraction: Poetic Inscription at the 2012 London Olympics and the 1951 Festival of Britain
101(20)
Lisa Mullen
PART III Textual Spaces / Spatial Texts
121(68)
Louis Kahn's Translation of the Fairy Tale: A Study in Literary-Architectural Interaction
123(22)
Darren R. Deane
Representation, Refuse and the Urban Context in Orhan Pamuk's Museum(s) of Innocence
145(16)
Esra Almas
The Tower of Babel: Concrete Poetry and Architecture in Britain and Beyond
161(28)
Greg Thomas
PART IV Reading the Domestic Interior
189(60)
`Room in the room that you room in?': Ted Berrigan's Structures
191(24)
Yasmine Shamma
No House in the World for James Baldwin: Reading Transnational Black Queer Domesticity in St Paul-de-Vence
215(34)
Magdalena J. Zaborowska
Notes on Contributors 249(4)
Index 253
Terri Mullholland teaches in the Department for Continuing Education at the University of Oxford. Her teaching and research interests are in early twentieth-century womens writing and modernism. She has published articles on Jean Rhys and Dorothy Richardson and her monograph British Boarding Houses in Interwar Womens Literature: Alternative Domestic Spaces is forthcoming. Nicole Sierra is a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow in the Department of English at Kings College London, where she teaches twentieth- and twenty-first-century literature and critical theory. She is currently finishing a monograph on architecture, literature and postmodernism and working on a book project on the British-born Surrealist Leonora Carrington.