Foucault and the idea of “architectonic discourse” or how to read others’ history

Ethnicity is a problematic concept. For many non-Western cultures, history became a linear passage of names, dates and events without any pragmatic dimension. A vague territory under the name of tradition, with the connotations of home and authenticity, separates these cultures from the alienated mo...

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Main Author: Saeid Khaghani
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2019-01-01
Series:Cogent Arts & Humanities
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311983.2019.1601541
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spelling doaj-48ded7f39cf1459ca65329efdddd4f232021-02-09T09:19:16ZengTaylor & Francis GroupCogent Arts & Humanities2331-19832019-01-016110.1080/23311983.2019.16015411601541Foucault and the idea of “architectonic discourse” or how to read others’ historySaeid Khaghani0University of TehranEthnicity is a problematic concept. For many non-Western cultures, history became a linear passage of names, dates and events without any pragmatic dimension. A vague territory under the name of tradition, with the connotations of home and authenticity, separates these cultures from the alienated modern world. In order to surpass this traditional/modern binary here in the domain of architecture, the first step is to come to the conclusion that these histories do not inhabit a continuous space. Foucault’s genealogical division of history as a method for creating a concept like “architectonic discourse” can be an apparatus to reach this goal. The advantages are to pluralise these linear histories and to surpass the rupture between ethnic and universal, and traditional versus modern division wrongly divided these territories into one as practical and the other as phantasmagorical. In this paper, their Foucauldian epitomes of resemblance and web of sympathy, difference and representation and finally a modern organic structure are searched in Persian architectural history.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311983.2019.1601541foucaulthistoryarchitectonic discourseepistemepersian architecture
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Saeid Khaghani
spellingShingle Saeid Khaghani
Foucault and the idea of “architectonic discourse” or how to read others’ history
Cogent Arts & Humanities
foucault
history
architectonic discourse
episteme
persian architecture
author_facet Saeid Khaghani
author_sort Saeid Khaghani
title Foucault and the idea of “architectonic discourse” or how to read others’ history
title_short Foucault and the idea of “architectonic discourse” or how to read others’ history
title_full Foucault and the idea of “architectonic discourse” or how to read others’ history
title_fullStr Foucault and the idea of “architectonic discourse” or how to read others’ history
title_full_unstemmed Foucault and the idea of “architectonic discourse” or how to read others’ history
title_sort foucault and the idea of “architectonic discourse” or how to read others’ history
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Cogent Arts & Humanities
issn 2331-1983
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Ethnicity is a problematic concept. For many non-Western cultures, history became a linear passage of names, dates and events without any pragmatic dimension. A vague territory under the name of tradition, with the connotations of home and authenticity, separates these cultures from the alienated modern world. In order to surpass this traditional/modern binary here in the domain of architecture, the first step is to come to the conclusion that these histories do not inhabit a continuous space. Foucault’s genealogical division of history as a method for creating a concept like “architectonic discourse” can be an apparatus to reach this goal. The advantages are to pluralise these linear histories and to surpass the rupture between ethnic and universal, and traditional versus modern division wrongly divided these territories into one as practical and the other as phantasmagorical. In this paper, their Foucauldian epitomes of resemblance and web of sympathy, difference and representation and finally a modern organic structure are searched in Persian architectural history.
topic foucault
history
architectonic discourse
episteme
persian architecture
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311983.2019.1601541
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