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A History of Territories, Movements and Borders: Politics of Inhabitation
If the city is as much about culture as nature, then a cultural understanding of the shaping of the urban is as essential as a scientific one. Here, architect and critic Marina Lathouri, who directs the graduate programme in History and Critical Thinking at the Architectural Association (AA) School of Architecture in London, describes how the concept of planning in the 19th century became intrinsically linked to notions of territory, borders and spatial organisation. She questions whether this might now be tested, and new design technologies used, to expose underlying emerging patterns of disruptive flows beckoning the possibility of the logic of a new social disposition.
A History of Territories, Movements and Borders: Politics of Inhabitation
If the city is as much about culture as nature, then a cultural understanding of the shaping of the urban is as essential as a scientific one. Here, architect and critic Marina Lathouri, who directs the graduate programme in History and Critical Thinking at the Architectural Association (AA) School of Architecture in London, describes how the concept of planning in the 19th century became intrinsically linked to notions of territory, borders and spatial organisation. She questions whether this might now be tested, and new design technologies used, to expose underlying emerging patterns of disruptive flows beckoning the possibility of the logic of a new social disposition.
A History of Territories, Movements and Borders: Politics of Inhabitation
Lathouri, Marina (author)
Architectural Design ; 83 ; 32-37
2013-07-01
6 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
A History of Territories, Movements and Borders: Politics of Inhabitation
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