
Instituting Worlds
Architecture and Islands
Routledge (Publisher)
1st Edition
Published on 30. December 2024
Book
Hardback
246 pages
978-1-032-49883-6 (ISBN)
Description
Islands have a long history of appealing to the architectural imagination and have served as sites for architectural expressions of cultural specificity, cultural conquest, and cultural hybridisation over millennia. From offshore financial centres to immigrant detention camps, tourist havens to military bases, the architectures of islands concretise the forces at play in our contemporary, crisis-ridden societies.
Collecting writings by a wide range of established scholars together with exciting new voices in architecture and affiliated disciplines, this book shows the pertinence islands hold for critical spatial thinking and practice today. Covering war and colonialism, detention and tourism, the topics raised in this book range from issues of urban development to close readings of buildings - whether ruined, designed, projected, preserved, or absent. Combing case studies, critical historiography, and pieces of experimental writing, the chapters disclose the variety of ways in which architecture can be used as a lens for analysing, disclosing, and untangling island specificity.
This volume offers a very timely, vibrant, and methodologically varied approach to the subject of architecture and islands. Its global reach, innovative outlook, and rich material will be of interest to scholars and students in architecture, landscape architecture, geography, and urban design and planning, alongside arts and literary studies.
Collecting writings by a wide range of established scholars together with exciting new voices in architecture and affiliated disciplines, this book shows the pertinence islands hold for critical spatial thinking and practice today. Covering war and colonialism, detention and tourism, the topics raised in this book range from issues of urban development to close readings of buildings - whether ruined, designed, projected, preserved, or absent. Combing case studies, critical historiography, and pieces of experimental writing, the chapters disclose the variety of ways in which architecture can be used as a lens for analysing, disclosing, and untangling island specificity.
This volume offers a very timely, vibrant, and methodologically varied approach to the subject of architecture and islands. Its global reach, innovative outlook, and rich material will be of interest to scholars and students in architecture, landscape architecture, geography, and urban design and planning, alongside arts and literary studies.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Taylor & Francis Ltd
Target group
College/higher education
General and Postgraduate
Illustrations
72 s/w Abbildungen, 72 s/w Photographien bzw. Rasterbilder
72 Halftones, black and white; 72 Illustrations, black and white
Dimensions
Height: 260 mm
Width: 183 mm
Thickness: 19 mm
Weight
701 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-032-49883-6 (9781032498836)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
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05/2026
1st Edition
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E-Book
12/2024
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Persons
Catharina Gabrielsson is Docent in Architecture and Associate Professor in Urban Theory and Design at the School of Architecture KTH, Stockholm. Her research centres on the relationship between architecture, art, and urban development, combining critical historiography with philosophy and artistic research. She is co-editor of Neoliberalism on the Ground: Architecture and Transformation from the 1960s to the Present (2020), Architecture and Feminisms: Ecologies, Economies, Technologies (2017), and Deleuze and the City (2016).
Marko Jobst is Senior Lecturer at Leeds School of Architecture. He is the author of A Ficto-Historical Theory of the London Underground (2017) and co-editor of Architectural Affects After Deleuze and Guattari with Helene Frichot (2021) and Queering Architecture: Methods, Practices, Spaces, Pedagogies with Naomi Stead (2023). His research interests include the philosophy of Gilles Deleuze, affect and queer theories, and experimental modes of writing.
Marko Jobst is Senior Lecturer at Leeds School of Architecture. He is the author of A Ficto-Historical Theory of the London Underground (2017) and co-editor of Architectural Affects After Deleuze and Guattari with Helene Frichot (2021) and Queering Architecture: Methods, Practices, Spaces, Pedagogies with Naomi Stead (2023). His research interests include the philosophy of Gilles Deleuze, affect and queer theories, and experimental modes of writing.
Editor
School of Architecture KTH, Stockholm
Leeds School of Architecture, UK
Content
Introduction
1. Friday I'm in Love
2. Ghost Islands: Telling an Intertidal Coast
3. Big House, Small State: Taiwan's Architecture of Island Precarity
4. Of Land and Sea: Reclamation Infrastructures in Mumbai
5. Aluminum Architecture from the Caribbean
6. Latent Histories of Manus Island
7. Islands of Carcerality: Fluid exceptionality within Australia's detention archipelago
8. What sticks: The Ambiguous Carcerality of Asinara
9. Contact Zones: Walking Robben Island
10. This Island Life: Provision Plots of the Plantationocene
11. Out of Time: Lake Constant and its Island
12. Extraterritoriality and the impact of tourism development in eastern Indonesia.
13. Escape, Exile, Architecture: Confining Yassiada
14. Fictioning Great War Island
15. Flotsam: Retelling the story
16. Scraps from the Wreckage: Remnants of Hashima Island
17. "Insular time, and 'something most profound'"
1. Friday I'm in Love
2. Ghost Islands: Telling an Intertidal Coast
3. Big House, Small State: Taiwan's Architecture of Island Precarity
4. Of Land and Sea: Reclamation Infrastructures in Mumbai
5. Aluminum Architecture from the Caribbean
6. Latent Histories of Manus Island
7. Islands of Carcerality: Fluid exceptionality within Australia's detention archipelago
8. What sticks: The Ambiguous Carcerality of Asinara
9. Contact Zones: Walking Robben Island
10. This Island Life: Provision Plots of the Plantationocene
11. Out of Time: Lake Constant and its Island
12. Extraterritoriality and the impact of tourism development in eastern Indonesia.
13. Escape, Exile, Architecture: Confining Yassiada
14. Fictioning Great War Island
15. Flotsam: Retelling the story
16. Scraps from the Wreckage: Remnants of Hashima Island
17. "Insular time, and 'something most profound'"