Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) P. Jones
AFILIAÇÃO(ÕES) University of Liverpool
ANO 2020
TIPO Artigo
PERIÓDICO Cultural Sociology
ISSN 1749-9755
E-ISSN 1749-9763
DOI 10.1177/1749975520905416
CITAÇÕES 2
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-18
MD5 23a36937b4313c30bba17dfa699b6f4f

Resumo

Architecture is inextricably entangled with time. Illustrating this point, the article explores two moments of architectural production centred on London in the mid-19th century: the 'Battle of the Styles', a struggle over the social meaning of historicist architectural design and its suitability for state-funded public buildings; and the proto-modernist Crystal Palace, which housed the Great Exhibition of 1851. While ostensibly involving different cultural orientations to pasts-presents-futures, both cases reflect how political claims can involve the mobilisation of temporalised architectural forms. The general contention is that architecture is a culturally experimental space through which nation-states and architects seek to orientate otherwise abstracted notions of temporality. While there is no straightforward or singular correspondence between temporality and architectural sites, the built environment is pushed and pulled by states' politicised claims regarding time and temporality. Architecture always involves the materialisation of particular and partial visions of the world as is, as was, and as could be; temporal registers in the built environment involve the stabilisation of some ways of being and the displacement of others. The political basis of these processes can be illuminated sociologically.

Ferramentas