Making a New World: Architecture and Communities in Interwar Europe
In the changing world of interwar Europe a longing for stability rose to the surface of social life. Newly developed neighbourhoods and buildings were designed to create the healing community that many people were dreaming of. Various social groups with nationalist, ideological, or religious agendas made this concept of community a cornerstone in their framework and appropriated it to prescribe the relations between architecture and modernity. Making a New World analyses the various ways in which these relations were determined.Most reformers encountered the potentialities of modernity, such as technology or mass media, in an accommodating way. In a broad spectrum of actions and proposals—from art exhibitions to séances, photo reports to roof tiles, landscapes to sanitation—these individuals were hoping to create a universe in which their communal dream could become a reality. The contributions to this richly illustrated volume draw the contours of this new world by analysing its foundations and working mechanisms at its heart.

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Making a New World: Architecture and Communities in Interwar Europe
In the changing world of interwar Europe a longing for stability rose to the surface of social life. Newly developed neighbourhoods and buildings were designed to create the healing community that many people were dreaming of. Various social groups with nationalist, ideological, or religious agendas made this concept of community a cornerstone in their framework and appropriated it to prescribe the relations between architecture and modernity. Making a New World analyses the various ways in which these relations were determined.Most reformers encountered the potentialities of modernity, such as technology or mass media, in an accommodating way. In a broad spectrum of actions and proposals—from art exhibitions to séances, photo reports to roof tiles, landscapes to sanitation—these individuals were hoping to create a universe in which their communal dream could become a reality. The contributions to this richly illustrated volume draw the contours of this new world by analysing its foundations and working mechanisms at its heart.

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Making a New World: Architecture and Communities in Interwar Europe

Making a New World: Architecture and Communities in Interwar Europe

Making a New World: Architecture and Communities in Interwar Europe

Making a New World: Architecture and Communities in Interwar Europe

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Overview

In the changing world of interwar Europe a longing for stability rose to the surface of social life. Newly developed neighbourhoods and buildings were designed to create the healing community that many people were dreaming of. Various social groups with nationalist, ideological, or religious agendas made this concept of community a cornerstone in their framework and appropriated it to prescribe the relations between architecture and modernity. Making a New World analyses the various ways in which these relations were determined.Most reformers encountered the potentialities of modernity, such as technology or mass media, in an accommodating way. In a broad spectrum of actions and proposals—from art exhibitions to séances, photo reports to roof tiles, landscapes to sanitation—these individuals were hoping to create a universe in which their communal dream could become a reality. The contributions to this richly illustrated volume draw the contours of this new world by analysing its foundations and working mechanisms at its heart.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9789058679093
Publisher: Leuven University Press
Publication date: 11/15/2012
Series: KADOC Artes , #13
Pages: 224
Product dimensions: 9.00(w) x 11.10(h) x 0.90(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Rajesh Heynickx teaches Art History at Universiteit Antwerpen and Sint-Lucas Architectuur Gent-Brussel.

Table of Contents

PROLOGUECommunity as a Prism: Re-aligning the Architectural Theory and Practice of the Interwar Period
by Rajesh Heynickx and Tom AvermaeteEXEGESISIntroduction
by Rajesh HeynickxGerman Cultural Criticism. The Desire for a Sense of Place and Community
by Thomas RohkrämerCommunities of Landscape. Nation, Locality and Modernity in Interwar England
by David MatlessThe (Il)legible City. Civic Survey and the Imagined Community
by Michiel DehaeneModernity and Community. A Difficult Combination
by Hilde HeynenEXPERIENCEIntroduction
by Marieke KuipersModel Homes for Working Class Urban Living
by Stuart Evans'Houses of Glass'. Modern Architecture and the Idea of Community in Poland, 1925-1944
by Martin KohlrauschNegotiated Modernism. British Suburbia between the Wars
by Barry CurtisMaking Camp. Landscape and Community in the Interwar German Youth Movements
by Kenny CupersEXPECTATIONIntroduction
by Elizabeth DarlingNuclei of a Genuine Urban Life. Bringing the Country to the City in 1930s London
by Elizabeth Darlingby Tom Avermaete
Building Internal Colonies. Play, Form and Youth Environments in Interwar FranceModernizing Musical Spaces. Music Halls and Utopian Communities in Frankfurt am Main, 1900-1930
by Hansjakob Ziemerby Marieke Kuipers
Colonizing Fresh Air. Community and Reform in Dutch Vacation Colonies and De VonkIMAGINATIONIntroduction
by Tom Avermaete and Rajesh HeynickxImages of the Countryside. Landscape, Village and Community in the Discourse of Belgian Farmers
by Bruno NotteboomA Law of Inertia. The Tower as Site and Symbol in Interwar Flanders
by Rajesh HeynickxThe Sociology of the City. Otto Neurath and the Concept of Gemeinwirtschaft
by Nader VossoughianEnvisioning Knowledge Architectures for a World Society. Paul Otlet's Architectural and Epistemic Design Strategies
by Charles van den HeuvelBibliography
Index of persons
Authors

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