History of Architecture V/VI
Alexandre Ismaïl Adnane
/Joshua Adu Darko
/Telmo Alves Luis
/Hadrien Pierre François Robert Arlaud
/Aurélien Robert Pierre Authier
/Benjamin Marc Béboux
/Nathan Brichet
/Esther Amélie Chatelain
/Valentine Marie Axelle Couble
/Mohamad Ali El Mawla
/Sahar El-Zein
/Marylin Habre
/Farah Hammoud
/Laszlo Fermin Hofmann
/Julie Hottinger
/Michelle Lepori
/Célia Lesigne
/Anna Maerean
/Joseph Jean Daniel Maziere
/Juliette Nicolas
/Simon Hubert André Marie Nougué
/Ana Preda
/Briana-Stefania Prelicz
/Alice Proietti
/Moises Sanchez Garralon
/Matteo Xavier Schürmann
/Edward Louis Thomson
/Maxime Thorez
/Pierre Hari Emmanuel Vann
/Livia Walther
In the twentieth century, radical social, political, economic, environmental, and technological shifts challenged existing social contracts - offering new potentials for exercising dominance as well as paths toward liberation. These historical transformations were reified in - and shaped by - new spatial arrangements.
The course charts a map of these transformations as they intersect with the production of the objects most specific to the discipline of architecture: buildings. In order to consider buildings as simultaneously concrete objects and conceptual constructs, the coursework examines the changing and competing definitions of the notion of typology as a means to historicize architecture in relation to modernity in the twentieth century.