Emphasize the Gap! Towards a Žižekian Definition of Critical-Emancipatory Architecture
Confronted with issues, whose (socioeconomic) causes cannot be resolved through the modification of the built environment, architectural interventions may often inadvertently aid the reproduction of the problems they seek to resolve. In eliminating symptoms of social inequality, alienation and margi...
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ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OWTU.10012-77262014-06-18T03:51:14Z Emphasize the Gap! Towards a Žižekian Definition of Critical-Emancipatory Architecture Novakovic, Uros Architecture Critical Architecture Slavoj Žižek Adolf Loos Peter Zumthor Ai Wei Wei Rem Koolhaas Brutalism Communism Emancipatory Politics Aesthetics Confronted with issues, whose (socioeconomic) causes cannot be resolved through the modification of the built environment, architectural interventions may often inadvertently aid the reproduction of the problems they seek to resolve. In eliminating symptoms of social inequality, alienation and marginalization, architecture can legitimize the social order out of which they arise. In such situations, architects’ attempts to concern themselves with narrowly practical concerns are insufficient even to their own aims, and in order to properly address the issues facing it, architecture must simultaneously operate as a vehicle for social critique and political emancipation. In the work of philosopher Slavoj Žižek, a critical-emancipatory intervention corresponds to an emphasis of a constitutive tension and discord (“the gap”) within what is commonly perceived as a stable, neutral background. Critique strives not to explicitly reveal existing problems. Instead, it reveals an inherent inconsistency within an implicit, ideological fantasy of order and harmony that allows us to naturalize these problems. Consequently, the critical-emancipatory potential of architecture resides not in its programmatic content nor in its representational image, but in its capacity to disrupt the reassuring affective texture of ideology. Critique resides in a formally subtle (concerning architecture in its narrowest definition as an affective structure), yet politically radical shift in how problems of everyday life are interpreted and processed; re-introducing a minimal sense of disquietude that is both critical and emancipatory. The disquietude, that marks an absence of a fantasy of order and harmony, can, paradoxically, only be sustained as a product of a formally (representationally) ordered and harmonious appearance. The critical-emancipatory disquietude is not a compromise of the order and harmony, but rather a reflection of its uncompromisingly egalitarian nature. 2013-08-22T14:05:11Z 2014-05-14T05:00:21Z 2013-08-22T14:05:11Z 2013-08-13 Thesis or Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/10012/7726 en |
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en |
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Architecture Critical Architecture Slavoj Žižek Adolf Loos Peter Zumthor Ai Wei Wei Rem Koolhaas Brutalism Communism Emancipatory Politics Aesthetics |
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Architecture Critical Architecture Slavoj Žižek Adolf Loos Peter Zumthor Ai Wei Wei Rem Koolhaas Brutalism Communism Emancipatory Politics Aesthetics Novakovic, Uros Emphasize the Gap! Towards a Žižekian Definition of Critical-Emancipatory Architecture |
description |
Confronted with issues, whose (socioeconomic) causes cannot be resolved through the modification of the built environment, architectural interventions may often inadvertently aid the reproduction of the problems they seek to resolve. In eliminating symptoms of social inequality, alienation and marginalization, architecture can legitimize the social order out of which they arise. In such situations, architects’ attempts to concern themselves with narrowly practical concerns are insufficient even to their own aims, and in order to properly address the issues facing it, architecture must simultaneously operate as a vehicle for social critique and political emancipation.
In the work of philosopher Slavoj Žižek, a critical-emancipatory intervention corresponds to an emphasis of a constitutive tension and discord (“the gap”) within what is commonly perceived as a stable, neutral background. Critique strives not to explicitly reveal existing problems. Instead, it reveals an inherent inconsistency within an implicit, ideological fantasy of order and harmony that allows us to naturalize these problems. Consequently, the critical-emancipatory potential of architecture resides not in its programmatic content nor in its representational image, but in its capacity to disrupt the reassuring affective texture of ideology. Critique resides in a formally subtle (concerning architecture in its narrowest definition as an affective structure), yet politically radical shift in how problems of everyday life are interpreted and processed; re-introducing a minimal sense of disquietude that is both critical and emancipatory. The disquietude, that marks an absence of a fantasy of order and harmony, can, paradoxically, only be sustained as a product of a formally (representationally) ordered and harmonious appearance. The critical-emancipatory disquietude is not a compromise of the order and harmony, but rather a reflection of its uncompromisingly egalitarian nature. |
author |
Novakovic, Uros |
author_facet |
Novakovic, Uros |
author_sort |
Novakovic, Uros |
title |
Emphasize the Gap! Towards a Žižekian Definition of Critical-Emancipatory Architecture |
title_short |
Emphasize the Gap! Towards a Žižekian Definition of Critical-Emancipatory Architecture |
title_full |
Emphasize the Gap! Towards a Žižekian Definition of Critical-Emancipatory Architecture |
title_fullStr |
Emphasize the Gap! Towards a Žižekian Definition of Critical-Emancipatory Architecture |
title_full_unstemmed |
Emphasize the Gap! Towards a Žižekian Definition of Critical-Emancipatory Architecture |
title_sort |
emphasize the gap! towards a žižekian definition of critical-emancipatory architecture |
publishDate |
2013 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10012/7726 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT novakovicuros emphasizethegaptowardsazizekiandefinitionofcriticalemancipatoryarchitecture |
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1716670165006942208 |