The production of this book stems from two of the editors longstanding research interests: the representation of architecture in print media, and the complex identity of the second phase of modernism in architecture given the role it played in postwar reconstruction in Europe.
While the history of postwar reconstruction has been increasingly well covered for most European countries, research investigating postwar architectural magazines and journals across Europe their role in the discourse and production of the built environment and particularly their inter-relationship and differing conceptions of postwar architecture is relatively undeveloped. Modernism and the Professional Architecture Journal sounds out this territory in a new collection of essays concerning the second phase of the reception and assimilation of modernism in architecture, as it was represented in professional architecture journals during the period of postwar reconstruction (19451965).
Professional architecture journals are often seen as conduits of established facts and knowledge. The role mainstream publications play, however, in establishing movements, trends or debates tends to be undervalued. In the context of the complex undertaking of postwar reconstruction, the shortage of resources, political uncertainty and the biographical complexities of individual architects, the chapters on key European architecture journals collected here reveal how modernist architecture, and its discourse, was perceived and disseminated in different European countries.
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xi | |
Introduction |
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1 | (10) |
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1 Swiss journals 1940-1965: mirroring the difficult departure into modernity |
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11 | (21) |
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2 Postwar Editorial Conversations in Germany: Baumeister and Baukunst und Werkform |
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32 | (24) |
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3 The free bird and its cages: Dutch architectural journals in the first decade after the Second World War |
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56 | (20) |
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4 Nation building: Sweden's modernisation and the autonomy of the profession |
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76 | (17) |
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5 Visual sensibility and the search for form: The Architectural Review in postwar Britain |
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93 | (19) |
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6 Axe or mirror? Architectural journals in postwar Hungary |
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112 | (19) |
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7 Periodicals and the return to modernity after the Spanish Civil War: Arquitectura, Hogar y Arquitectura and Nueva Forma |
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131 | (19) |
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8 The Greek vision of postwar modernity |
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150 | (19) |
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9 Architecture d'aujourd'hui, the Andre Bloc years |
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169 | (15) |
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10 Against the contingencies of Italian Society: issues of historical continuity and discontinuity in Italy's postwar architectural periodicals |
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184 | (13) |
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11 The after-life of the architectural journal |
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197 | (15) |
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List of figures |
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212 | (5) |
Index |
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217 | |
Torsten Schmiedeknecht teaches design, history and theory at the School of Architecture, University of Liverpool, UK. His research interests include the representation of architecture in print media; rationalism in architecture; and architectural competitions. He is the co-editor of The Rationalist Reader, Rationalist Traces, An Architects Guide to Fame and Fame and Architecture. He is currently working on an RIBA-funded project about the representation of (modern) architecture in childrens literature.
Andrew Peckham teaches architecture at the University of Westminster, UK. He has co-edited, with Hannah Lewi, a series of annual anthology issues of The Journal of Architecture (20162018) and is currently editing a book on teaching studio: The Intrinsic and Extrinsic City. His Architecture and its Imprint is due for publication in 2018.