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1

Colvin, Howard. "A Biographical Dictionary of British Architects 1600–1840: Corrections and Additions to the Third Edition (Yale University Press 1995)." Architectural History 43 (2000): 334–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0066622x00001106.

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This is the fifth list of corrections and additions to the third edition of my Dictionary. For the first time a section of ‘Additional Biographies’ has been included to provide details of some further architects active during the period 1600–1840, of whose careers enough can be reconstructed to justify giving them a place. The remaining sections are as usual lists of bare facts to be added, subtracted or amended.Attention should be drawn to the Biographical Dictionary of Architects at Reading by Sidney M. Gold, privately published at Reading, 1999, and to the Dictionary of Land Surveyors and L
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2

Sedlacek, Jozef, Daniel Matějka, Zuzana Fialová, and Radim Klepárník. "Spatial aspects of the interpretation of cultural heritage." Muzeológia a kultúrne dedičstvo 10, no. 4 (2022): 89–113. http://dx.doi.org/10.46284/mkd.2021.10.4.6.

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Creating an exhibition is a multidisciplinary task which, besides the work of the authors of the scenario, copywriters and experts in the given topic, involves also the work of architects and landscape architects. Although the paper reflects on various completed exhibitions, the scenario and form of an exhibition cannot be separated. The paper focuses on spatial aspects of outdoor exhibitions from the perspective of an architect and landscape architect and documents them via various completed exhibitions. In terms of architecture they can be classified upon the aspects of form and content, whe
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3

Gold, John R. "‘A Very Serious Responsibility’? The MARS Group, Internationally and Relations with CIAM, 1933–39." Architectural History 56 (2013): 249–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0066622x00002501.

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In an interview recorded shortly before his death in 1987, Maxwell Fry recalled the birth of Modern architecture in Great Britain around a half-century earlier. In the course of discussing the work of the Modern Architectural Research (MARS) Group — the society that he had helped to establish in February 1933 and of which he was then the last surviving founder-member — Fry highlighted the links between architects in Britain and their continental European counterparts. Observing that MARS was first established on the basis of an invitation that Wells Coates had received to form a British chapte
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4

Montaner, Josep Maria, and Zaida Muxí Martínez. "Modern Housing: Heritage and Vitality." Modern Housing. Patrimonio Vivo, no. 51 (2014): 10–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.52200/51.a.m3ws825n.

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One of the main subjects in contemporary architecture is how to deal with the physical and intellectual requirements of transforming modern housing. Joan Busquets points out in his contribution to this issue, that the special effort made by modern architects and progressive housing politics during the 20th century must be reinterpreted and followed today. Intentionally, this issue brings a special focus on the Iberoamerican world, specifically Spain, Portugal and Latin America, with the aim of relocating it in a cultural world of predominantly Anglo-American historiography. In any case, it pre
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5

Daria, Ostrikova, Bodnar Taras, and Yasinskyi Maksym. "INFLUENCE OF THE GREAT FIRE OF LONDON IN 1666 ON SPECIFICS OF CREATING BAROQUE STYLE OF CHURCHES IN ENGLAND." Vìsnik Nacìonalʹnogo unìversitetu "Lʹvìvsʹka polìtehnìka". Serìâ Arhìtektura 4, no. 1 (2022): 108–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.23939/sa2022.01.108.

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At the same time, when Baroque became the dominant style in Italy, in English architecture in the 17th century architects continued using the Classical forms. After that, in the architecture of England appeared a style called Palladian architecture and Jacobean architecture. Style of Baroque became prevalent just at the end of this century. After the Great Fire of London on 5 September 1666 most of the city's buildings were destroyed, all these constructions had to be restored or built new ones. The 17th and 18th centuries were a painful period, not only for the history of Britain but also aff
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Peck, L. V. "Uncovering the Arundel Library at the Royal Society: changing meanings of science and the fate of the Norfolk donation." Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London 52, no. 1 (1998): 3–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsnr.1998.0031.

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Thomas Howard, Earl of Arundel, was the most important collector in early 17th Century Britain. Much attention has been paid to his collections of painting and sculpture, his patronage of painters such as Rubens and Van Dyck and architects such as Inigo Jones, and his search through Greece and Turkey for antiquities. Little, however, has been written on the Arundel Library, which was equally famous. The cause is not hard to find: the library has been dispersed whereas the marbles and antiquities have found a home at Oxford, the manuscripts at the British Library and the College of Arms, and th
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Gosseye, Janina. "The Janus-Faced Shopping Center: The Low Countries in Search of a Fitting Shopping Paradigm." Journal of Urban History 44, no. 5 (2016): 862–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0096144216641374.

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When in the mid-1950s, the shopping center typology reached the Low Countries, it confronted governments, policy makers, architects, and planners with the question of how to introduce and adapt this novel commercial typology to the local context. To respond to this question, several “missions” were organized to study this phenomenon abroad. The conclusion was that two distinct shopping center paradigms existed: the American model, as it could be observed in the United States and Canada, and the European model, as it had emerged in Sweden, France, and Great Britain. This article investigates wh
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8

Hopkin, Jonathan. "Party Matters." Party Politics 15, no. 2 (2009): 179–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1354068808099980.

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This article addresses the relationship between political decentralization and the organization of political parties in Great Britain and Spain, focusing on the Labour Party and the Socialist Party, respectively. It assesses two rival accounts of this relationship: Caramani's `nationalization of politics' thesis and Chhibber and Kollman's rational choice institutionalist account in their book The Formation of National Party Systems. It argues that both accounts are seriously incomplete, and on occasion misleading, because of their unwillingness to consider the autonomous role of political part
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9

Filippov, Vasily. "Walter Gropius, history of the IV CIAM Congress, the Charter of Athens and some of its results." Innovative Project 9, no. 15 (2024): 11–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.17673/ip.2024.9.15.2.

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The history of the emergence of the idea of multi-story housing construction is described, starting with the project of the experimental settlement of Spandau-Haselhorst by Walter Gropius and the subsequent report of Gropius to the third CIAM congress. The conditions under which the IV CIAM Congress met are shown - the world economic crisis, the strengthening of authoritarianism in the world, the absence of German, American and Soviet architects, as well as opponents of Le Corbusier in other delegations. The history of the IV Congress and the appearance, ten years after it, of two versions of
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10

Ignacio, Peris Blat, José Sanchis Gisbert Salvador, and Ponce Gregorio Pedro. "Santa María Micaela y Park Hill: Éticas y estéticas paralelas = Santa María Micaela and Park Hill: Ethics and aesthetics in parallel." rita_ Revista Indexada de Textos Académicos, no. 11 (May 5, 2019): 74–79. https://doi.org/10.24192/2386-7027(2019)(v11)(06).

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Santa María Micaela (Valencia, 1958-61), obra del arquitecto Santiago Artal, es un hecho singular dentro del panorama de la arquitectura española de los años cincuenta, ya que supone uno de los primeros ejemplos de incorporación de los planteamientos de la modernidad en la arquitectura de la vivienda colectiva y, al mismo tiempo, participa de algunas de las propuestas revisionistas llevadas a cabo por los jóvenes arquitectos que empiezan a ser críticos con la Carta de Atenas. En esos momentos, España vive una situación de aislamiento resp
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11

Саблин, Kirill, and Olga Valieva. "Creative Industries in the Modern Economy: Definition, Approaches to Measurement." Issues of Economic Theory 24, no. 4 (2024): 31–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.52342/2587-7666vte_2024_3_31_49.

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The article is devoted to a review of the experience of creative industries development in foreign countries and Russia. They are classified as types of economic activities that are associated with the creation, using and commercialization of knowledge and information. They are becoming increasingly important for economic well-being. Creative industries generate significant positive externalities and contribute to reducing social inequality, protecting the environment, spreading new ideas and inclusion in society. The pioneers in the formalization of creative industries were countries with dev
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Vilcu, Alexandra. "Tendencies of High-Skilled Migration coming from Romania. Favourable Legislation and Social Policies." European Journal of Social Sciences Education and Research 1, no. 1 (2014): 65. http://dx.doi.org/10.26417/ejser.v1i1.p65-69.

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The external migration of a significant part of Romania's high-skilled population is a social phenomenon which became increasingly frequent starting from the 1990s, right after the fall of the communist regime. The basis for this phenomenon consists of several causes: globalization, the strengthening of international economic relations, and later on, Romania's adhesion to the European Union. Research has shown that of all high-skilled population, the professionals who emigrate more frequently consist of engineers, teachers, medical staff, scientific researchers, economists and architects. Besi
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13

Aganson, Olga I. "The First World War and emerging of a new regional order in the Balkans: an augmentation of small states' role." Journal of the Belarusian State University. History, no. 1 (January 31, 2020): 7–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.33581/2520-6338-2020-1-7-17.

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The First World War launched a tremendous restructuring of the international system. One of its major outcomes was a transformation of the small states of Central and South-Eastern Europe from objects to subjects of international relations. Having emerged or enlarged their territories in wake of multinational empires’ collapse, the small states became key players on the regional level. Reshaping of the Balkan regional order is of a particular interest to researchers as the Balkan instability triggered destruction of the previous international system. The purpose of the article is to understand
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14

Karpunin, V. I., and T. S. Novashina. "Russia has Spread its Wings. Phenomenology of our Era Global Systematic Contradiction Development." Vestnik of the Plekhanov Russian University of Economics, no. 5 (October 7, 2022): 44–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.21686/2413-2829-2022-5-44-53.

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The article reveals specific features of the present day stage in the global systematic contradiction ‘creditors – debtors’ development. The origin of its critical stage was depicted in the context of form variety in the total hybrid, informational war that was projected well in advance, thoroughly worked-out and unleashed in a mass way against Russia by overseas and over-oceans Anglo-Saxon political elites. Technologies of the present day informational wars were studied and tools of cynical manipulation of public opinion of people in their own countries used to obtain a mass support of any de
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15

Rumyantsev, Vladimir P. "Harold Macmillan and the Suez Crisis of 1956." Vestnik Tomskogo gosudarstvennogo universiteta. Istoriya, no. 88 (2024): 114–22. https://doi.org/10.17223/19988613/88/14.

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This article is devoted to the role of the British politician Harold Macmillan in the Suez Crisis of 1956. Based on British archival documents and MacMillan’s personal diary, this article recreates a double game played by the head of the Treasury. Harold Macmillan belongs to the number of British politicians whose biographies have many «white spots», carefully hidden by themselves and their surroundings. One of these gaps is the activity of Macmillan as the Chancellor of the Exchequer during the Suez Crisis of 1956. From the very beginning of the aggravation of the situation in the Middle East
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16

Hughes, T. J., R. H. Buchanan, K. A. Mawhinney, et al. "Reviews of Books and Maps." Irish Geography 10, no. 1 (2016): 116–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.55650/igj.1977.861.

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REVIEWS OF BOOKSIRELAND IN PREHISTORY, by Michael Herity and George Eogan. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1977. 302 pp. £8.95. Reviewed by: T. J. HughesTHE LIVING LANDSCAPE: KILGALLIGAN, ERRIS, CO. MAYO, by S. Ó Catháin and Patrick O'Flanagan. Dublin: Comhairle Bhéaloideas Éireann, 1975. 312 pp. Reviewed by: R. H. BuchananTHE IRISH TOWN: AN APPROACH TO SURVIVAL, by Patrick Shaffrey. Dublin: The O'Brien Press, 1975. 192 pp. £5.00. Reviewed by: K. A. MawhinneyLOST DEMESNES: IRISH LANDSCAPE GARDENING 1660–1845, by Edward Malins and the Knight of Glin. London: Barrie and Jenkins, 1976. 208 pp.
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17

Bukaitė, Vilma. "Establishment of political and diplomatic relations between Lithuania and France in 1918-1920: Exchange of mistrust." Lietuvos istorijos studijos 27 (August 28, 2024): 61–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.15388/lis.2011.36599.

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In 1918, the Lithuanian state was re-established referring to the principle of self-determination of nations. Hence, the first Lithuanian government expected to receive the due support and recognition from the most powerful winners of World War I, including France. However, one of the most influential architects of 'New Europe', the French Prime Minister Georges Clemenceau, conceived this new Baltic state as a potential territory of democratic Russia, which the French allies seeked to restore, and later on of Poland. According to this politician who presided at the Paris Peace Conference, Lith
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18

Waelkens, Marc, and Edwin Owens. "The Excavations at Sagalassos 1993." Anatolian Studies 44 (December 1994): 169–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3642990.

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During 1993 the excavations at Sagalassos continued for their fourth season from 3 July until 19 August. From 21 until 28 August a survey was carried out in the district immediately south and south-east of the excavation site. The work was directed by Professor Marc Waelkens (Dept. of Archaeology, Catholic University of Leuven). A total of 45 Turkish workmen and 62 scientists or students from various countries (Belgium, Turkey, Great Britain, Portugal, France, Austria and Greece) were involved in the project. The team included 25 archaeologists, 8 illustrators, 8 architect-restorers (supervise
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19

Hill, Judith. "Architecture in the Aftermath of Union: Building the Viceregal Chapel in Dublin Castle, 1801–15." Architectural History 60 (2017): 183–217. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/arh.2017.6.

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AbstractThe chapel in Dublin Castle, built between 1807 and 1815, was one of the most impressive ecclesiastical Gothic buildings of the pre-Pugin revival in the British Isles. It was commissioned by the viceregal establishment following the Act of Union between Great Britain and Ireland in 1801, and was closely associated with Church of Ireland objectives for post-Union Protestantism in Ireland. This essay investigates the patrons’ ambitions for the chapel, and discusses its design and execution by Francis Johnston, successor to James Gandon as the foremost architect of public buildings in Ire
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Waelkens, Marc, Edwin Owens, Ann Hasendonckx, and Burcu Arikan. "The Excavations at Sagalassos 1991." Anatolian Studies 42 (December 1992): 79–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3642953.

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During 1991 large-scale excavations at Sagalassos continued for their second season from 13 July until 5 September. The work was directed by Professor Marc Waelkens (Dept. of Archaeology, Catholic University of Leuven). A total of 42 scientists from various countries (Belgium, Turkey, Great Britain, Germany and Portugal) as well as 25 local workmen (supervised by Mr. Ali Toprak) carried out the work. The team included 20 archaeologists, 4 illustrators (supervised by G. Evsever and R. Kotsch), 4 architect-restorers (directed by Prof. R. Lemaire and Dr. K. Van Balen), 3 cartographers (directed b
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21

Kellaway, Laura. "Simplicity of Form: a tale of two cathedrals and interiors lost?: Hamilton Founders Memorial Theatre (1962) and St Joseph's Catholic Church Morrinsville (1964)." Architectural History Aotearoa 19 (December 13, 2022): 122–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.26686/aha.v19i.8054.

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St Joseph's Catholic Church, Morrinsville, was designed in 1958-62 by Doug Angus of Angus, Flood & Griffiths of Hamilton. Built in 1964-65, the design was radical, had simplicity in form both externally and internally. The simple external upturned parabola defied the level of innovation and detailing, creating both the exterior and interior form with the use of pre-stressed concrete ribs, and pre-cast panels between. The parabolic form was 49' 6" in height, designed by engineer Thomas Flood. The 8,000 sqft church accommodated 600 people. It was said to be New Zealand's largest single-pour
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22

DZHYHIL, Yuriy. "THE INTERACTION OF ARCHITECTURE AND ENVIRONMENT IN NEAVE BROWN'S MOST OUTSTANDING CREATION." Vìsnik Nacìonalʹnogo unìversitetu "Lʹvìvsʹka polìtehnìka". Serìâ Arhìtektura 5, no. 1 (2023): 75–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.23939/sa2023.01.075.

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The article explores the origins of unique creative methods of the British architect Neave Brown (1929-2018). The deep ideas that the author laid in the architectural and spatial solutions of the most famous of his works - the Alexandra Road Estate residential complex in the Camden Town district of London (Great Britain) are revealed. In particular, the role of the social context in the formation of housing is revealed and the interaction of architecture with the urban environment is demonstrated. The relevance of Neave Brown's ideas and the importance of their adaptation in modern residential
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23

Fair, Alistair. "‘A new image of the living theatre’: the Genesis and Design of the Belgrade Theatre, Coventry, 1948–58." Architectural History 54 (2011): 347–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0066622x00004093.

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When it opened in March 1958, the Belgrade Theatre, Coventry, was the first new professional theatre to be constructed in Britain for nearly two decades and the country’s first all-new civic theatre (Figs 1 and 2). Financially supported by Coventry City Council and designed in the City Architect’s office, it included a 910-seat auditorium with associated backstage facilities. Two features of the building were especially innovative, namely its extensive public foyers and the provision of a number of small flats for actors. The theatre, whose name commemorated a major gift of timber to the city
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24

Bullen, J. B. "Alfred Waterhouse’s Romanesque ‘Temple of Nature’: The Natural History Museum, London." Architectural History 49 (2006): 257–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0066622x00002781.

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The Natural History Museum in London is a spectacular building in many senses (Fig. 1). As one of the outstanding landmarks of high Victorian architecture, it was designed to draw attention both to itself and to its contents. No other museum building in Britain adopted a Romanesque style on this scale; no other building had used terracotta in such a rich and decorative manner, and no other building (other than, perhaps, the University Museum, Oxford) so curiously employed external decoration to illustrate its internal function. It was calculated to appeal to a wide public and its animal sculpt
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25

Foukona, Joseph D. "Truth Telling and Reconciliation in the Pacific: Solomon Islands' Experience." Journal of Sociology, October 13, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/14407833241284437.

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Truth-telling was necessary as part of Solomon Islands’ reconciliation and peace-building process following the violent conflict between 1998 and 2003. When Solomon Islands gained constitutional independence from Great Britain in 1978, the architects of independence did not anticipate that the country would be embroiled in a violent conflict 20 years later. This conflict left the national economy in ruins, the nation-state on the verge of disintegration with law and order in disarray and an Australian-led Pacific Islands Forum regional intervention force was deployed in 2003. The Solomon Islan
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26

Harris, Neville. "Children, Families and Social Security: Eleanor Rathbone's Welfare Legacy." Modern Law Review, March 19, 2025. https://doi.org/10.1111/1468-2230.12949.

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In The Disinherited Family, published in 1924, Eleanor Rathbone argued powerfully for ‘family endowment’, involving the direction of collective resources towards family support via state‐provided family allowances. This ground‐breaking work influenced many, including the architect of Britain's postwar welfare state, William Beveridge, who included universal family allowances in his plan. Rathbone's central argument was that society would benefit greatly from a redistribution of collective resources towards subsidising child rearing and, in particular, supporting motherhood and guaranteeing the
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27

Brockington, Roy, and Nela Cicmil. "Brutalist Architecture: An Autoethnographic Examination of Structure and Corporeality." M/C Journal 19, no. 1 (2016). http://dx.doi.org/10.5204/mcj.1060.

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Introduction: Brutal?The word “brutal” has associations with cruelty, inhumanity, and aggression. Within the field of architecture, however, the term “Brutalism” refers to a post-World War II Modernist style, deriving from the French phrase betón brut, which means raw concrete (Clement 18). Core traits of Brutalism include functionalist design, daring geometry, overbearing scale, and the blatant exposure of structural materials, chiefly concrete and steel (Meades 1).The emergence of Brutalism coincided with chronic housing shortages in European countries ravaged by World War II (Power 5) and g
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28

Armitage, John. "The Uncertainty Principle." M/C Journal 3, no. 3 (2000). http://dx.doi.org/10.5204/mcj.1846.

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Paul Virilio. The Information Bomb. London: Verso, 2000. 145 pp., ISBN: 1-85984-745-5 (hardback). Born in Paris in 1932, the French political and 'technocultural' theorist Paul Virilio is the leading exponent of the idea that 'dromology' (the logic of speed) stands at the centre of the political formation and technocultural transformation of the contemporary world. Virilio is an architect of the 'Brutalist' school and political 'critic of the art of technology' as well as a Husserlian phenomenologist and post-Einsteinian analyst of technoculture. In recent years Virilio has developed his own p
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Huang, Angela Lin. "Leaving the City: Artist Villages in Beijing." M/C Journal 14, no. 4 (2011). http://dx.doi.org/10.5204/mcj.366.

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Introduction: Artist Villages in Beijing Many of the most renowned sites of Beijing are found in the inner-city districts of Dongcheng and Xicheng: for instance, the Forbidden City, Tiananmen Square, the Lama Temple, the National Theatre, the Central Opera Academy, the Bell Tower, the Drum Tower, the Imperial College, and the Confucius Temple. However, in the past decade a new attraction has been added to the visitor “must-see” list in Beijing. The 798 Art District originated as an artist village within abandoned factory buildings at Dashanzi, right between the city’s Central Business District
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Radywyl, Natalia. "A Moment's Daydreaming." M/C Journal 12, no. 1 (2009). http://dx.doi.org/10.5204/mcj.118.

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Drift: An IntroductionEntering into Drift is akin to entering—or becoming ensnared by—a hum. Projected across one wall, the work uses abstract visual forms to draw visitors into its meditational folds. Quadraphonic sound circulates in smooth, heavy pulses, like the steady rumble of a train running over deep-set tracks. A succession of vibrating lines occupy the screen, much like the horizontal static of a poorly-tuned television. Gradually, the ambient timbre darkens, the hum becomes more persistent and atmospheric undulations more frequent, until room and body expand with intensity. Throbbing
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