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Constructed histories: Storytelling and the practices of architectural conservation

Posted on:2010-10-20Degree:M.ArchType:Thesis
University:Carleton University (Canada)Candidate:Jensen, NathanFull Text:PDF
GTID:2442390002988977Subject:Architecture
Abstract/Summary:PDF Full Text Request
A fundamental concern of the practices of architectural conservation is the protection of history, identity, and place, against a modernizing world that displaces and forgets. To achieve this, these practices have relied on recourse to the past, attaching themselves to the environment of old, as well as the atmosphere and social structures that characterized it. As a consequence, conservation has been guided by nationalist attitudes that seek to inscribe singular, dominant cultural codes onto the physical manifestation of history that is the built environment. Indeed, these practices, oriented through the antiquated lens of homogenizing nationalisms, attempt to transform the heterodoxies of the past into a new cultural orthodoxy.;This thesis proposes, however, that practices of conservation should include, at their core, the recognition of genuine epistemic and social difference. A building can be conserved only through the understanding and employment of its own heterogeneous story, one that endures in and through its plurality of meanings, and transcends any particular moment in its own accumulated history. For this reason, this thesis will explore the intersection of social theory and architecture as a means to reach a critical understanding of the motivations and ramifications of conservation practices. In doing so, it will not only criticize the nature of traditional architectural conservation, but will also propose a framework of storytelling as a potential alternative for future practices of conservation that would result in a more ethical and equally representative forum.
Keywords/Search Tags:Practices, Conservation, Architectural
PDF Full Text Request
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