ABSTRACT

First published in 2004. Walter Benjamin famously defined modernity as “the world dominated by its phantasmagorias”. The chapters in this book focus on one such phantasmagoria, namely that of ‘modernity’ itself. From the late seventeenth century until today, the ‘modern’ has served as a key category by which to understand an ever-changing present. Art and architecture have played a key role in this pursuit as the means by which the modern was to manifest itself. The aim of this anthology is to trace the modern project through its multifarious manifestations, in order to understand contemporary culture in a deeper sense than facile discussions of modernism and post-modernism often grant. Drawing on architectural and urban history as well as philosophy and sociology, the chapters outline the complex and conflicting roots of modernity by tracing its manifestations in architecture and the city. The book is divided into three parts, each exploring a distinct aspect of modernity. While part one scrutinizes the much-abused concepts of ‘modernity’ , ‘modernism’ and ‘the modern’ , parts two and three look at the manifestations of the modern in architecture and the city respectively. Focusing particularly on the transition between historicism and modernism, the chapters offer a re-interpretation of early modern architectural and urban culture as it came to expression in people such as Cerda, Semper, Bötticher, Scott, Baudelaire, the Goncourt brothers, Benjamin, Warburg, Kracauer, Mackintosh, Behrens, Taut, and Le Corbusier. For all their differences, these were thinkers and practitioners whose undisputed modernity arose from a deep preoccupation with history. A re-reading of their legacy may throw light on the neglected reciprocity between modernity and its historical conditions of becoming.

part |2 pages

Part One Modernity

chapter 1|20 pages

Analysing modernity

Some issues

chapter 2|19 pages

What modernism was

Art, progress and the avant-garde

chapter 3|14 pages

Modernity and architecture

chapter |12 pages

Modernity and the uses of history

Understanding classical architecture from Bötticher to Warburg

chapter |13 pages

Projecting modern culture

‘Aesthetic fundamentalism’ and modern architecture

part |2 pages

Part Two Architecture

chapter 7|21 pages

‘How is it that there is no modern style of architecture?’

‘Greek’ Thomson versus Gilbert Scott

chapter |13 pages

‘A complete and universal collection’

Gottfried Semper and the Great Exhibition

chapter |19 pages

The interior as aesthetic refuge

Edmond de Goncourt’s

chapter |17 pages

Timely untimeliness

Architectural modernism and the idea of the

chapter |20 pages

The concrete memory of modernity

Excerpts from a Moscow diary

part |2 pages

Part Three The city

chapter 13|15 pages

Ildefonso Cerdá and modernity

chapter 14|24 pages

‘To knock fire out of men’

Forging modernity in Glasgow

chapter 15|15 pages

The expressionist utopia

chapter 16|20 pages

Walter Benjamin’s Arcades Project

A prehistory of modernity

chapter |16 pages

Impromptus of a great city

Siegfried Kracauer’s

chapter 18|18 pages

Orpheus in Hollywood

Siegfried Kracauer’s Offenbach film