Anxious Modernisms: Experimentation in Postwar Architectural Culture
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About this book
The two decades after the Second World War are typically viewed as an inchoate interregnum between an expiring modernism and an incipient post-modernism. Yet this tidy narrative tells only half the story leaving out a second development an evolving and powerful modernism. The essays here reveal that a wide range of postwar architects and theoristsincluding Saarinen and Rudofsky in the United States; ATBAT-Afrique in Morocco; Price and the Smithsons in England; Bakema in Holland; and the Metabolists in Japanwere determined to renew rather than abandon the legacy of modernism. Presenting new research these essays analyze an individual or movement that grappled with modernism in response to developments within and outside the architectural profession. They reveal a nexus of pre-occupations that dominated discourse of the postwar era including authenticity place individual freedom and popular culture. In addition the introduction and coda discuss the critical themes of postwar architecture and propose a framework for conceptualizing architectural modernism and its evolution after the war. Together the books essays remap the emerging field of postwar architectural studies refocusing attention on modernist ideas and work that have had a critical ongoing impact on architectural culture. Copublished with the Canadian Centre for Architecture
