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7 - ‘European’ Architecture: Politics in Search of Form and Meaning

Paul Jones
Affiliation:
University of Liverpool
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Summary

In a living state organism, people are always trying to reinterpret political symbolism.

Wolfgang Braunfels, Urban Design in Western Europe: Regime and Architecture, 900–1900 (1988), 321.

Introduction

It has been argued in previous chapters that states' strategies to foster belonging among their citizens have led to the built environment being mobilized in a variety of ways in differing political contexts. The focus of this chapter is on two distinct but related developments in contemporary Europe: first, the European Union's attempts to embed their political project in cultural forms from architecture and the built environment (discussed with reference to the Brussels Capital of Europe project), and second, coexistent projects in member nation states to reposition and ‘Europeanize’ existing national architectural symbols (illustrated with reference to Norman Foster's reconstruction of the Reichstag in Berlin). An overarching concern of the chapter is to develop an understanding of the role of architects in the cultural construction of what can broadly be understood as ‘transnational’ European political projects. As such, the focal point is not so much the emergence or otherwise of a distinctly European style of architecture, but rather the extent to which the ongoing work of high-profile architects to embed the ‘imagined community’ (Anderson 1983) of Europe into socially meaningful forms reveals something about the wider politics of architecture in the contemporary European context.

Type
Chapter
Information
The Sociology of Architecture
Constructing Identities
, pp. 141 - 165
Publisher: Liverpool University Press
Print publication year: 2011

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