Understanding Extraordinary Architectural Experiences through Content Analysis of Written Narratives
This study a) identifies how people describe, characterize, and communicate in written form Extraordinary Architectural Experiences (EAE), and b) expands the traditional qualitative approach to architectural phenomenology by demonstrating a quantitative method to analyze written narratives. Specifi...
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Architectural Research Centers Consortium
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doaj-f326add313f94cad895617fe22a34e682020-11-24T21:19:22ZengArchitectural Research Centers ConsortiumEnquiry: The ARCC Journal of Architectural Research2329-93392015-12-0112110.17831/enq:arcc.v12i1.390322Understanding Extraordinary Architectural Experiences through Content Analysis of Written NarrativesBrandon Richard Ro0Julio Bermudez1VCBO Architecture Salt Lake City, UTSchool of Architecture and Planning The Catholic University of America This study a) identifies how people describe, characterize, and communicate in written form Extraordinary Architectural Experiences (EAE), and b) expands the traditional qualitative approach to architectural phenomenology by demonstrating a quantitative method to analyze written narratives. Specifically, this study reports on the content analysis of 718 personal accounts of EAEs. Using a deductive, ‘theory-driven’ approach, these narratives were read, coded, and statistically analyzed to identify storyline structure, convincing power, and the relationship between subjective and objective experiential qualities used in the story-telling process. Statistical intercoder agreement tests were conducted to verify the reliability of the interpretations to approach the hard problem of “extraordinary aesthetics” in architecture empirically. The results of this study confirm the aesthetic nature of EAE narratives (and of told experiences) by showing their higher dependence on external objective content (e.g., a building’s features and location) rather than its internal subjective counterpart (e.g., emotions and sensations), which makes them more outwardly focused. The strong interrelationships and intercoder agreement between the thematic realms provide a unique aesthetic construct revealing EAE narratives as memorable, embodied, emotional events mapped by the externally focused content of place, social setting, time, and building features. A majority of EAE narratives were found to possess plot-structure along with significant relationships to objective-subjective content that further grounded their storylines. This study concludes that content analysis provides not only a valid method to understand written narratives about extraordinary architectural experiences quantitatively, but also a view as to how to map the unique nature of aesthetic phenomenology empirically. https://www.arcc-journal.org/arcc-new/index.php/arccjournal/article/view/390aestheticsarchitectural experiencephenomenologyresearch methodologycontent analysisintercoder agreement |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Brandon Richard Ro Julio Bermudez |
spellingShingle |
Brandon Richard Ro Julio Bermudez Understanding Extraordinary Architectural Experiences through Content Analysis of Written Narratives Enquiry: The ARCC Journal of Architectural Research aesthetics architectural experience phenomenology research methodology content analysis intercoder agreement |
author_facet |
Brandon Richard Ro Julio Bermudez |
author_sort |
Brandon Richard Ro |
title |
Understanding Extraordinary Architectural Experiences through Content Analysis of Written Narratives |
title_short |
Understanding Extraordinary Architectural Experiences through Content Analysis of Written Narratives |
title_full |
Understanding Extraordinary Architectural Experiences through Content Analysis of Written Narratives |
title_fullStr |
Understanding Extraordinary Architectural Experiences through Content Analysis of Written Narratives |
title_full_unstemmed |
Understanding Extraordinary Architectural Experiences through Content Analysis of Written Narratives |
title_sort |
understanding extraordinary architectural experiences through content analysis of written narratives |
publisher |
Architectural Research Centers Consortium |
series |
Enquiry: The ARCC Journal of Architectural Research |
issn |
2329-9339 |
publishDate |
2015-12-01 |
description |
This study a) identifies how people describe, characterize, and communicate in written form Extraordinary Architectural Experiences (EAE), and b) expands the traditional qualitative approach to architectural phenomenology by demonstrating a quantitative method to analyze written narratives. Specifically, this study reports on the content analysis of 718 personal accounts of EAEs. Using a deductive, ‘theory-driven’ approach, these narratives were read, coded, and statistically analyzed to identify storyline structure, convincing power, and the relationship between subjective and objective experiential qualities used in the story-telling process. Statistical intercoder agreement tests were conducted to verify the reliability of the interpretations to approach the hard problem of “extraordinary aesthetics” in architecture empirically. The results of this study confirm the aesthetic nature of EAE narratives (and of told experiences) by showing their higher dependence on external objective content (e.g., a building’s features and location) rather than its internal subjective counterpart (e.g., emotions and sensations), which makes them more outwardly focused. The strong interrelationships and intercoder agreement between the thematic realms provide a unique aesthetic construct revealing EAE narratives as memorable, embodied, emotional events mapped by the externally focused content of place, social setting, time, and building features. A majority of EAE narratives were found to possess plot-structure along with significant relationships to objective-subjective content that further grounded their storylines. This study concludes that content analysis provides not only a valid method to understand written narratives about extraordinary architectural experiences quantitatively, but also a view as to how to map the unique nature of aesthetic phenomenology empirically.
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topic |
aesthetics architectural experience phenomenology research methodology content analysis intercoder agreement |
url |
https://www.arcc-journal.org/arcc-new/index.php/arccjournal/article/view/390 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT brandonrichardro understandingextraordinaryarchitecturalexperiencesthroughcontentanalysisofwrittennarratives AT juliobermudez understandingextraordinaryarchitecturalexperiencesthroughcontentanalysisofwrittennarratives |
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