Subjectivizations : Deleuze and Architecture


Autoria(s): Brott, Simone
Data(s)

01/05/2003

Resumo

My thesis is an exploration of the architectural production surrounding the French philosopher Gilles Deleuze, specifically, through the overarching theme of Deleuze’s theory of subjectivity, which I will call subjectivization. I interpret this to mean the strange coalescence of matter, architectural subject, and event, in architectural experience and culture. I speculate that subjectivization presents a yet under-explored dimension of deleuzianism in architecture. In order to develop this I pursue two independent trajectories: firstly the narrative of architectural production surrounding Deleuze, from the 1970s until today, as it is an emergence of changing groupings, alliances, formations and disbandment in the pursuit of creative-intellectual tasks—what might be called the subjectivization of architecture—and, secondly, through a speculation about the architecture of subjectivization—that is, an attempt to explore, concretely, what might be the space and time of subjectivization. Chapter One traces an oral history of deleuzianism in architecture, through conversations with Sanford Kwinter and John Rajchman, describing how the Deleuze milieu makes its way into architectural practice and discussion—subjectivization as a social and cultural emergence—whereas Chapter Two theorizes the emergence of an architectural subjectivity where architecture constitutes its own affective event—what I call subjectivization or material becoming-subject.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/67955/

Publicador

Yale University

Relação

http://architecture.yale.edu/people/simone-brott

Brott, Simone (2003) Subjectivizations : Deleuze and Architecture. Masters by Research thesis, Yale University.

Fonte

School of Design; Creative Industries Faculty

Palavras-Chave #120103 Architectural History and Theory
Tipo

Thesis