ABSTRACT

Architecture on the Borderline interrogates space and territory in a turbulent present where nation-state borders are porous to a few but impermeable to many. It asks how these uneven and conflicted social realities are embodied in the physical and material conditions imagined, produced or experienced through architecture and urbanism.

Drawing on historical, global examples, this rich collection of essays illustrates how empires, nations and cities expand their frontiers and contest boundaries, but equally how borderline identities of people and places influence or expose these processes. Empirical chapters covering Central Asia, the Asia Pacific region, the American continent, Europe and the Middle East offer multiple critical insights into the ways in which our spatial imagination is contingent on ‘border-thinking’; on the ways of being and navigating frontiers, boundaries and margins, the three themes used to organise their content. The underlying premise of the book is that sensitisation to border conditions can alter our understanding of the static physical spaces that service political or cultural ideologies, and that the view from the periphery opens up new ways of understanding sovereignty. In exploring these various spaces and their transformative subjectivities, this book also reveals the unrelenting precarity of contesting and living on the margins, and related spaces and discourses that are neglected or suppressed.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

Architecture on the borderline

part One|2 pages

Frontier

chapter 2|21 pages

Intersecting sovereignties

Border camps and border villages in wartime North America

chapter 3|20 pages

Data displacements

Transmitting digital media and the architecture of detention

chapter 4|24 pages

Archipelagos and enclaves

On the border between Jordan and Palestine-Israel

part Two|2 pages

Boundary

chapter 5|16 pages

The wall against borders

Contesting Fortress Europe

chapter 6|20 pages

En route

The networked mobile border camps of Northern France

chapter 7|18 pages

Mapping the war

Everyday survival during the siege of Sarajevo

chapter 8|21 pages

Filling in the gaps

Walls without limits and sovereignty with exceptions

chapter 9|17 pages

Confronting Koreas and the DMZ

part Three|2 pages

Margin

chapter 10|24 pages

The remembered village between Europe and Asia-Minor

Nea Magnisia at Bonegilla

chapter 12|20 pages

Pushing boundaries

Heritage resilience of minority communities in post-war Sri Lanka

chapter 13|18 pages

Where do we draw a line?

Heritage, identity and place in global heritage