ABSTRACT

The Optimum Imperative examines architecture’s multiple entanglements within the problematics of Socialist lifestyle in postwar Czechoslovakia.

Situated in the period loosely bracketed by the signing of the Munich accords in 1938, which affected Czechoslovakia’s entrance into World War II, and the Warsaw Pact troops’ occupation of Prague in 1968, the book investigates three decades of Czech architecture, highlighting a diverse cast of protagonists. Key among them are the theorist and architect Karel Honzík and a small group of his colleagues in the Club for the Study of Consumption; the award-winning Czechoslovak Pavilion at the 1958 World Expo in Brussels; and SIAL, a group of architects from Liberec that emerged from the national network of Stavoprojekt offices during the reform years, only to be subsumed back into it in the wake of Czechoslovak normalization. This episodic approach enables a long view of the way that the project of constructing Socialism was made disciplinarily specific for architecture, through the constant interpretation of Socialist lifestyle, both as a narrative framework and as a historical goal.

Without sanitizing history of its absurd contortions in discourse and in daily life, the book takes as its subject the complex and dynamic relationships between Cold War politics, state power, disciplinary legitimating narratives, and Czech architects’ optimism for Socialism. It proposes that these key dimensions of practicing architecture and building Socialism were intertwined, and even commensurate at times, through the framework of Socialist lifestyle.

chapter |18 pages

Introduction*

Optimizing Optimism

part 1|63 pages

Projection

chapter 1|31 pages

Socialism and Lifestyle

The Intellectual Road to the Optimum Dwelling

chapter 2|23 pages

Reasonable Consumption

The Necessism Group and the Rationalizing of Needs

part 2|98 pages

Production

chapter 3|33 pages

Architecture for All

Nationalization of Czechoslovakia’s Architecture

chapter 4|25 pages

All for Architecture

Determinants of Architecture and of Architectural Authors

chapter 5|33 pages

One Building for All

The Czechoslovak Brussels Pavilion 1

part 3|88 pages

Experimentation

chapter 6|21 pages

An Avant-Garde for All

“Without Legends and Myths”

chapter 7|32 pages

Not an Avant-Garde

The Emergence of SIAL from Stavoprojekt Liberec

chapter 8|29 pages

Experiments in Free Time and Play

Liberec, circa 1966