ABSTRACT

Architecture, and its pedagogy in the academy, is dominated by the technology of image production that veils the ‘naked power’ behind its operation. It conforms to the principles of cultural logic of the society of the spectacle, consistent with neoliberal capitalism. The problem with this dominant pedagogy is that it violates the fundamental ethical imperative, putting architecture in direct contradiction with the ‘common good’. In addition, it has let architecture enter the brothel of pornographic capitalism which turns every object into an object of obscene gratification of the senses.

In this book, Nadir Lahiji adopts Alain Badiou’s thesis from The Pornographic Age to demonstrate that contemporary architecture is in absolute complicity with the pornographic present. The traits that Badiou identifies in this age are manifestly visible in architectural surfaces which are subordinated to the same ‘regime of images’. Similarly to Badiou’s political indictments of the society which has given rise to the pornographic present, the book condemns the architecture that has lent its service to the same society with a license to consummate its transgression to better cater to the imperative of the ‘regime of images’.

Transposing the conceptual categories in Badiou’s analysis to the critique of architecture’s pornographic turn in contemporary society, the book constructs a conceptual framework by which to demonstrate the specific manifestations of pornography in building. The book is aimed at architecture students at higher graduate and post-graduate levels.

part I|32 pages

Philosophical thoughts on pornography

chapter Chapter 1|7 pages

Visibility of the invisible

Pornography and utilitarianism

chapter Chapter 2|5 pages

Profanation and pornography

chapter Chapter 3|10 pages

The society of pornography

chapter Chapter 4|8 pages

Pornography and the society of spectacle

part II|2 pages

Badiou and the pornographic present

chapter Chapter 5|8 pages

The fetish of democracy

chapter Chapter 7|7 pages

The brothel and the Chief of Police

part III|4 pages

The architecture of the pornographic age

chapter Chapter 8|4 pages

Appearance and Schein

chapter Chapter 9|8 pages

Building between nudity and clothing

chapter Chapter 10|7 pages

Digital tattooists, or, the new criminals

chapter Chapter 11|12 pages

The obscene surplus of drapery

chapter Chapter 12|7 pages

Veiling and unveiling

chapter Chapter 13|4 pages

Pornography and exhibition-value

part IV|2 pages

Architecture and political truth

chapter Chapter 14|13 pages

Utilitarianism, happiness, and the use of pleasure

chapter Chapter 15|6 pages

Philosophy and happiness

chapter Chapter 16|18 pages

Political truth, ideology, and the camera obscura

chapter Chapter 17|15 pages

Architecture, capitalism, and the pornographic apparatus