Scales and Perspectives of Resilience: The Atomic Bombing of Hiroshima and Tange’s Peace Memorial

'Resilience' can mean a range of things, including the ability of a city or a community to recover quickly both physically and socially, through tangible and intangible elements, physical structures, and people. Built environment scholars have picked up on the concept of resilience in rece...

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Main Author: Carola Hein
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ubiquity Press 2019-06-01
Series:Architectural Histories
Online Access:https://journal.eahn.org/articles/304
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spelling doaj-ee04fdf181be412f8b7e6cdcb155ab192020-11-25T01:33:19ZengUbiquity PressArchitectural Histories2050-58332019-06-017110.5334/ah.304164Scales and Perspectives of Resilience: The Atomic Bombing of Hiroshima and Tange’s Peace MemorialCarola Hein0Department of Architecture, Faculty of Architecture and the Built Environment, Delft University of Technology, Delft'Resilience' can mean a range of things, including the ability of a city or a community to recover quickly both physically and socially, through tangible and intangible elements, physical structures, and people. Built environment scholars have picked up on the concept of resilience in recent years, interpreting it in multiple ways and creating a broad range of narratives. These narratives need to be explored critically, considering who wrote them at what time for what audience and with what narrative goals. This article explores how various actors—from architects to film makers, from historians to politicians and planners —have consciously proposed a range narratives of resilience through their depictions of post World War II Hiroshima. It first briefly reflects on the meaning of resilience. It then builds upon earlier examinations of the destruction of Hiroshima and the construction of the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park and the Peace Memorial Museum by the Japanese architect Tange Kenzō to explore how different actors conceived of resilience, for whom and from which perspective they have built narratives. In the second section, the article explores how Tange and his team managed to bring their project to realization. It suggests that administrators, architects and urbanists, have used rebuilding visions and detailed reports to create resilience narratives aimed respectively at global and local audiences. Overall, the text demonstrates that together, disaster and rebuilding, their representation in the urban environment are all part of larger societal constructions of historical identity.https://journal.eahn.org/articles/304
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Carola Hein
spellingShingle Carola Hein
Scales and Perspectives of Resilience: The Atomic Bombing of Hiroshima and Tange’s Peace Memorial
Architectural Histories
author_facet Carola Hein
author_sort Carola Hein
title Scales and Perspectives of Resilience: The Atomic Bombing of Hiroshima and Tange’s Peace Memorial
title_short Scales and Perspectives of Resilience: The Atomic Bombing of Hiroshima and Tange’s Peace Memorial
title_full Scales and Perspectives of Resilience: The Atomic Bombing of Hiroshima and Tange’s Peace Memorial
title_fullStr Scales and Perspectives of Resilience: The Atomic Bombing of Hiroshima and Tange’s Peace Memorial
title_full_unstemmed Scales and Perspectives of Resilience: The Atomic Bombing of Hiroshima and Tange’s Peace Memorial
title_sort scales and perspectives of resilience: the atomic bombing of hiroshima and tange’s peace memorial
publisher Ubiquity Press
series Architectural Histories
issn 2050-5833
publishDate 2019-06-01
description 'Resilience' can mean a range of things, including the ability of a city or a community to recover quickly both physically and socially, through tangible and intangible elements, physical structures, and people. Built environment scholars have picked up on the concept of resilience in recent years, interpreting it in multiple ways and creating a broad range of narratives. These narratives need to be explored critically, considering who wrote them at what time for what audience and with what narrative goals. This article explores how various actors—from architects to film makers, from historians to politicians and planners —have consciously proposed a range narratives of resilience through their depictions of post World War II Hiroshima. It first briefly reflects on the meaning of resilience. It then builds upon earlier examinations of the destruction of Hiroshima and the construction of the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park and the Peace Memorial Museum by the Japanese architect Tange Kenzō to explore how different actors conceived of resilience, for whom and from which perspective they have built narratives. In the second section, the article explores how Tange and his team managed to bring their project to realization. It suggests that administrators, architects and urbanists, have used rebuilding visions and detailed reports to create resilience narratives aimed respectively at global and local audiences. Overall, the text demonstrates that together, disaster and rebuilding, their representation in the urban environment are all part of larger societal constructions of historical identity.
url https://journal.eahn.org/articles/304
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