Browsing Architecture, Phantasmagoria, and the Culture of Contemporary Capitalism Symposium by Issue Date
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Architecture, Phantasmagoria, and the Culture of Contemporary Capitalism - Panel
(Georgia Institute of Technology, 2017-03-31)Panel discussion on Architecture, Phantasmagoria, and the Culture of Contemporary Capitalism. -
Architecture, Phantasmagoria, and the Culture of Contemporary Capitalism - Introduction
(Georgia Institute of Technology, 2017-03-31)This symposium addresses the concept of phantasmagoria in architecture, unearthing its various manifestations in the contemporary culture of spectacle. Participants from a variety of fields at the intersection of ... -
Haunts: A Eulogy to Phantasmagoria
(Georgia Institute of Technology, 2017-03-31)My aim in this paper is to rethink and reconfigure the notion of phantasmagoria not as forms of deception and domination (myth, fetishism, illusion, dreaming) but rather as sites of and encounters with ‘gatherings of ... -
The Gothic Imagination: From Castle to Shipwreck
(Georgia Institute of Technology, 2017-03-31)The gothic is a term designating a style in medieval architecture, which inspired a mode of the imagination in the Enlightenment and Romantic era. This mode found its fullest expression in narrative, popularized by ... -
Space After Spectacle: Infrastructure, Indifference and the Phantasmagoria of Transit
(Georgia Institute of Technology, 2017-03-31)Andreotti and Lahiji’s The Architecture of Phantasmagoria presents an incisive critique of the discourse of spectacle in architecture. ‘Spectacle’, they note, has become the ‘tired mantra’ of a supposedly critical ... -
Culture of Circulation
(Georgia Institute of Technology, 2017-03-31)Once upon a time, in the days when modern architecture was young, circulation through a building was primarily a functional problem. By the mid-twentieth century, when the monument building morphed into the ... -
A Specter is Haunting Babel - The Specter of Language
(Georgia Institute of Technology, 2017-03-31)Urban theology begins with a biblical tale of two cities: Enoch, built by Cain, and Babel, destroyed by God. The fact that the pithy primeval story in Genesis 1-11 finds it necessary to develop separate critiques of ...