Architecture, Media, Populism… and Violence: Reification and Representation II

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The ‘Storming of the Capitol’ was, for many, the culminating media performance of the four-year presidency of Donald Trump. His presidency and its ‘final act’, bore all the hallmarks of a 21st century form of populism and media-politico spectacle that may yet come to dominate the political scene in the US, and worldwide, for years to come. The questions that such events raise are complex, varied and operative across a multitude of disciplines. This book engages with these vexed questions in the broad fields of politics and media, but does so, uniquely, through the prism of architecture.

This book does not, however, limit its view to the recent events in Washington DC or the United States. Rather, it seeks to use those events as the starting point for a critique of architecture in the tapestry of mediated forms of protest and ‘political action’ more generally. Each chapter draws on case studies from across timeframes and across nations.

The book sharpens our critique of the relationship between direct political action, its media representation and the role it assigns to architecture – as played out globally in the age of mass media. In doing so, it opens up broader debates about the past, present and future roles of architecture as a political tool in the context of international political systems now dominated by changing and unpredictable uses of media, and characterised by an increasingly volatile and at times violent form of political activism. It is essential reading for any student or researcher engaging with these questions.

Author(s): Graham Cairns
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2022

Language: English
Pages: 290
City: London

Cover
Half Title
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Table of Contents
Contributors
Weaponising Architecture
PART ONE
1 Screening the Capitol Riot
2 Housing Populism: Constructing the “Little
Man’s” House,
Deconstructing the “Queer”
Home
3 Representation and Refusal: From State Architecture to Highway Protests
4 Architecture and Disciplinary Knowledge: A Case Study of Hong Kong’s Heritage and Politics
5 Mediating Consensus and Enacting Dissensus: Contested Space, Architecture and the Limits of Representation
INTERSECTION
6 Architecture Journalism and the Proto-Political
PART TWO
7 The Press Photography of ‘Red Vienna’, 1929–1938
8 Diplomacy Under Siege: Belgium’s Diplomatic Patrimony
as Political Target during the Boxer Rebellion (1900)
and
the Lumumba Assassination (1961)
9 Social Infrastructure and Disintegration, Statecraft and Democracy. Making an Example of Broadwater Farm Estate
10 Germania-on-Thames
11 The Pornographic Scene of Insurrection: On Disimaging the Architecture of Democracy from the Imagery of Potemkin Steps to the Reimaging of the Capitol Riot
Image Credits
Index