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The University as a Settlement Principle: Territorialising Knowledge in Late 1960s Italy
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posted on 2023-07-26, 15:01 authored by Francesco ZuddasThe 1960s and the 1970s marked a generational shift in architectural discourse at a time when the revolts inside universities condemned the academic institution as a major force behind the perpetuation of a controlling society. Focusing on the crisis and reform of higher education in Italy, The University as a Settlement Principle investigates how university design became a lens for architects to interpret a complex historical moment that was marked by the construction of an unprecedented number of new campuses worldwide.
Implicitly drawing parallels with the contemporary condition of the university under a regime of knowledge commodification, it reviews the vision proposed by architects such as Vittorio Gregotti, Giuseppe Samonà, Archizoom, Giancarlo De Carlo, and Guido Canella, among others, to challenge the university as a bureaucratic and self-contained entity, and defend, instead, the role of higher education as an agent for restructuring vast territories. Through their projects, the book discusses a most fertile and heroic moment of Italian architectural discourse and argues for a reconsideration of architecture’s obligation to question the status quo.
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Refereed
- Yes
Number of pages
240Publisher
RoutledgePlace of publication
London, UKISBN
9781351680264Language
- other
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2020-06-05Legacy creation date
2020-06-05Legacy Faculty/School/Department
Faculty of Arts, Humanities & Social SciencesUsage metrics
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