White Supremacy, Settler Colonialism, Modernist Architecture, and Contemporary Preservation: Remaking the Past, Preserving Power

This book examines the afterlives of the built environment produced through early 20th-century settler colonialism. The author analyzes contemporary architectural preservationists’ narrative strategies to remake what were designed as racialized “European” zones – in opposition to “Indigenous” zones – as white cities through the documentation, preservation, and addition to the UNESCO World Heritage List. This book interrogates the fashioning of white cities through ethnographic methods with local architectural preservationists and primary sources, such as World Heritage Committee meeting notes and World Heritage List nomination files and inscription materials, in the preservation of built form in Asmara, Brasília, Casablanca, Rabat, and Tel Aviv.

The book is aimed at scholars and students interested in the politics of the built environment, spatial politics, urban studies, architectural history, international relations, urban geopolitics, settler colonialism, international organizations, and the politics of commemoration.

1147408499
White Supremacy, Settler Colonialism, Modernist Architecture, and Contemporary Preservation: Remaking the Past, Preserving Power

This book examines the afterlives of the built environment produced through early 20th-century settler colonialism. The author analyzes contemporary architectural preservationists’ narrative strategies to remake what were designed as racialized “European” zones – in opposition to “Indigenous” zones – as white cities through the documentation, preservation, and addition to the UNESCO World Heritage List. This book interrogates the fashioning of white cities through ethnographic methods with local architectural preservationists and primary sources, such as World Heritage Committee meeting notes and World Heritage List nomination files and inscription materials, in the preservation of built form in Asmara, Brasília, Casablanca, Rabat, and Tel Aviv.

The book is aimed at scholars and students interested in the politics of the built environment, spatial politics, urban studies, architectural history, international relations, urban geopolitics, settler colonialism, international organizations, and the politics of commemoration.

56.99 In Stock
White Supremacy, Settler Colonialism, Modernist Architecture, and Contemporary Preservation: Remaking the Past, Preserving Power

White Supremacy, Settler Colonialism, Modernist Architecture, and Contemporary Preservation: Remaking the Past, Preserving Power

by Robert Flahive
White Supremacy, Settler Colonialism, Modernist Architecture, and Contemporary Preservation: Remaking the Past, Preserving Power

White Supremacy, Settler Colonialism, Modernist Architecture, and Contemporary Preservation: Remaking the Past, Preserving Power

by Robert Flahive

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Overview

This book examines the afterlives of the built environment produced through early 20th-century settler colonialism. The author analyzes contemporary architectural preservationists’ narrative strategies to remake what were designed as racialized “European” zones – in opposition to “Indigenous” zones – as white cities through the documentation, preservation, and addition to the UNESCO World Heritage List. This book interrogates the fashioning of white cities through ethnographic methods with local architectural preservationists and primary sources, such as World Heritage Committee meeting notes and World Heritage List nomination files and inscription materials, in the preservation of built form in Asmara, Brasília, Casablanca, Rabat, and Tel Aviv.

The book is aimed at scholars and students interested in the politics of the built environment, spatial politics, urban studies, architectural history, international relations, urban geopolitics, settler colonialism, international organizations, and the politics of commemoration.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781040382974
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: 06/27/2025
Series: Interventions
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 208
File size: 8 MB

About the Author

Robert Flahive is an international relations scholar interested in the politics of the built environment through a capacious interpretation of architectural history, international relations, and urban studies. He holds a PhD in Political and Cultural Thought from the Alliance for Social, Political, Social, and Ethical Thought (ASPECT) at Virginia Tech, an MA in Political Studies from the American University of Beirut, and a BA in English from Washington University in St. Louis.

Table of Contents

  1. Chapter 1: Afterlives of “European zones”: Contemporary Architectural Preservation in White Cities
  2. Chapter 2: Didactic Narratives: Preservationists’ Tools for Remaking the Past
  3. Chapter 3: Going Global: Institutional changes for the addition of White Cities to the World Heritage List
  4. Chapter 4: Silencing Palestinians: Remaking settler colonial urbanism through the White City Tel Aviv
  5. Chapter 5: Remaking the histories of the white city in Rabat
  6. Chapter 6: Mobilizing the Racialized Built Environment in Asmara
  7. Chapter 7: Reclaiming the white city in Casablanca and the Moroccan state
  8. Chapter 8: Conclusion
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