Architecture Modern (late 19th Century To 1945)
Narrating the Globe
The Emergence of World Histories of Architecture
- Publisher
- MIT Press
- Initial publish date
- Oct 2023
- Category
- Modern (late 19th Century to 1945), General, Modern (late 19th Century to 1945)
-
Hardback
- ISBN
- 9780262047975
- Publish Date
- Oct 2023
- List Price
- $79.00
Classroom Resources
Where to buy it
Description
How notions of progress, beauty, and cultural superiority structured the genre of nineteenth-century world histories of architecture—and shaped the discipline as we know it today.
The nineteenth century saw the emergence of a new genre of architectural writing: the grand history of world architecture. This genre often expressed a deeply Eurocentric worldview, largely dismissing non-Western architecture through narratives of historical progress and stylistic beauty. Yet even as nineteenth-century historians worked to construct an exclusive architectural canon, they were engaged in constant debate over its categories and constraints. Narrating the Globe traces the emergence of this historical canon, exposing the questions and problems that prompted the canon’s very formation.
Bringing together architectural historians from around the world, this collection of essays—the first comprehensive examination of the nineteenth-century architectural history survey as a literary genre—includes overviews of the origins and legacy of the global architecture survey genre, as well as close examinations of key works, including books by lesser-known but intriguing authors such as Louisa C. Tuthill, Christian L. Stieglitz, and Daniel Ramée, and the more famous surveys by James Fergusson, Franz Kugler, Banister Fletcher, and Auguste Choisy. Narrating the Globe is an illuminating read for anyone interested in architectural history’s long, complex, and often tendentious trajectory.
About the authors
Contributor Notes
Petra Brouwer is an architectural historian at the University of Amsterdam who specializes in the history of modern architecture and town planning. Author of an award-winning study of postwar design of Dutch new towns, she has also served as editor-in-chief for the journal Architectural Histories.
Martin Bressani is William C. Macdonald Professor at McGill University’s Peter G-H Fu School of Architecture in Montréal. Coeditor of the Nineteenth-Century Architecture volume of The Companions to the History of Architecture, he is also the author of Architecture and the Historical Imagination: Eugène-Emmanuel Viollet-le-Duc. Christopher
Drew Armstrong is an Associate Professor at the University of Pittsburgh, where he directs the Architectural Studies program. His many publications include the book Julien-David Leroy and the Making of Architectural History.