The myth of the nation: Historiography of New Zealand architecture since 1907
Data(s) |
01/01/2007
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Resumo |
This paper considers the relationship between the recent historiography (of the last quarter century) of “New Zealand architecture” and the historical notion of “New Zealand-ness” invoked in contemporary architecture. It argues that a more recent programmatic uptake of post-War discussions on national identity and regional specificity has fed the tendencies of practicing architects to defer to history in rhetorical defences of their work: the beach-side mansion as a contemporary expression of the 1950s bach; a formal modernism divorced from the social discourse adherent to the historical moment that it “restates”; and so on. The paper will consider instances in the historiography of New Zealand architecture where historians have compounded, consciously or accidentally, a problem that is systemic to the uses made by architects of historical knowledge (in the most general examples), identifying the difficulties of relying upon the tentative conclusions of an under-studied field in developing principles of contemporary architectural practice under the banners of New Zealand-ness, regionalism, or localism, or with reference to icons of New Zealand architectural history. At the heart of this paper is a reflection on historiographical responsibility in presenting knowledge of a national past to an audience that is eager to transform that knowledge into principles of contemporary production. What, the paper asks, is the historical basis for speaking of a New Zealand architecture? Can we speak of a national history of architecture distinct from a regional history, or from an international history of architecture? |
Identificador |
http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:34514/LeachMythHistoriography.pdf |
Idioma(s) |
eng |
Publicador |
New Zealand Studies Association |
Palavras-Chave | #New Zealand #Architectural History #Waitangi #Stacpoole, John #Beaven, Peter #Wood, Peter #Mitchell, David #Australia #Verge, John #Bach #310101 Architecture #310105 History of the Built Environment #430103 History - Pacific #EX |
Tipo |
Conference Paper |