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Occupation: ruin, repudiation, revolution

Book

Occupation: ruin, repudiation, revolution

DOI link for Occupation: ruin, repudiation, revolution

Occupation: ruin, repudiation, revolution book

constructed space conceptualized

Occupation: ruin, repudiation, revolution

DOI link for Occupation: ruin, repudiation, revolution

Occupation: ruin, repudiation, revolution book

constructed space conceptualized
ByLynn Churchill, Dianne Smith
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2015
eBook Published 1 March 2016
Pub. Location London
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315598680
Pages 214
eBook ISBN 9781315598680
Subjects Built Environment, Humanities
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Churchill, L., & Smith, D. (2015). Occupation: ruin, repudiation, revolution: constructed space conceptualized (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315598680

ABSTRACT

Bringing together an international range of contributors from the fields of practice, theory and history, this book takes a fresh look at occupation. It argues that occupation is a prospect that begins with ruin--a residue from the past, an implied or even a resounding presence of something previous that holds the potential for transformation. This prospect invites us to repudiate, re-imagine and re-define lived space, thereby asserting occupation as an act of revolution. Authors drawn from the fields of architecture, urbanism, interior architecture, dance dramaturgy, art history, design and visual arts, cultural studies and media studies provide a unique, holistic view of occupation, examining topics such as: the authority of architecture; architecture as an act of revolution; women in hypersexual space; occupation as a serialized act of ruin; and the definition of space as repudiation. They discuss how acts that re-invent territory and/or shift boundaries--psychological, social and physical--affect identity and demonstrate possession. This theme of occupation is significant and topical at a time of radical flux, generated by the proliferation of hypermedia, and also by the dramatically shifting environmental, political and economic context of this era. The book concludes by asserting that it is through occupation (private and public: real, virtual, remembered, re-invented) that we appear or disappear as the individual or collective self, because the spaces we construct assert particular agendas which we may either contest or live in accord with.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter 1|12 pages

Introduction: What?

ByLynn Churchill, Dianne Smith

part |2 pages

PART I RUIN

chapter 2|16 pages

Damnatio Memoriae: Interiors and the Art of Forgetting

ByEdward Hollis

chapter 3|18 pages

Self-ruining and Situated Vagrancy: The Geography of Performance

ByBenedict Anderson

chapter 4|16 pages

‘Crude Hints Towards an History of my House in L[incoln’s] I[nn]Fields’: Occupying Ruin

ByLynn Churchill, Dianne Smith

part |2 pages

PART II REPUDIATION

chapter 5|16 pages

Tragedy and Assimilation: Occupying the Patterned Surface

ByKirsty Volz

chapter 6|16 pages

Ordinary Things, Domestic Space and Photography: Takashi Yasumura’s Interiors

ByLynn Churchill, Dianne Smith

chapter 7|16 pages

Seeing the Unseen: This is Not an Interior

ByVanessa Galvin

part |2 pages

PART III REVOLUTION

chapter 8|20 pages

Occupying Utopia: Collusion, Persuasion, Revolution

ByLynn Churchill

chapter 9|20 pages

Hypersexual Occupations

ByNicole Kalms

chapter 10|14 pages

With Feet Firmly Planted on Unstable Ground

ByJesse O’Neill

chapter 11|18 pages

An Insane Perspective to the Occupation of Interiors

ByDianne Smith
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