Taubman College

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Assistant Professor Claire Zimmerman to respond to panel at The Buell Conference on the History of Architecture

Taubman College Assistant Professor of Architecture Claire Zimmerman has been selected to be a respondent for a panel focusing on early modernism at The Buell Conference on the History of Architecture next month.
 
The conference, sponsored by The Temple Hoyne Buell Center for the Study of American Architecture, will take place on April 16 and 17, 2010, at Columbia University’s Buell Center in New York City.
 
 
About the Conference:
 
This inaugural Buell Conference on the History of Architecture considers emerging directions in scholarly publishing on architecture and related fields within the North American academy. Conceived bibliographically, the conference brings together recent authors on diverse subjects to present new, unpublished work to be discussed in relation to their books and those of their colleagues. Its subject matter encompasses architecture, urbanism and modernity broadly understood.
 
Today, publication remains central to maintaining those overlapping spheres in which discourse forms, circulates, is reproduced, and is contested. By inquiring into different modes of history writing, the conference explores interactions between architectural scholarship, interdisciplinary exchange, and shifting discursive contours.
 
In particular, the conference asks: What kinds of intellectual constellations, if any, are forming in the new scholarship? What are their primary concerns, their premises, and their debates? What role(s) do books play in these formations? At a time when academic publishing is under increased pressure, the conference also affirms the contributions made by such work to defining the parameters of academic inquiry more broadly, and of architecture and urbanism more specifically.
 

Conference Schedule:
 
Friday 16 April 2010
 
2:00-2:15

Welcome and introductory remarks
Reinhold Martin, Director
Buell Center, Columbia University
 
2:15-4:15

Books and Buildings: Obsolescence and Sustainability
Daniel M. Abramson, Tufts University
 

Space, Information, and the Public Sphere
Richard Wittman, University of California, Santa Barbara
 
Respondent: Ed Eigen, Princeton University
 

4:30-6:15

Desprez’s Linneanum: Classification, Hybridization and the Question of Architectural Order
Erika Naginski, Harvard University
 
Experiencing Architecture and Embodying Citizenship in the Early Republic
David Serlin, University of California, San Diego
 
Respondent: Can Bilsel, University of San Diego
 

Saturday 17 April 2010
 
9:15-11:00
 
Birds of a Feather
Hadas Steiner, University of Buffalo

Arcosanti vs. Onecity
Larry Busbea, University of Arizona
Respondent: Mary Louise Lobsinger, University of Toronto

11:15-1:00
 
Building Virtual Cities: 1895-1945
Jennifer S. Light, Northwestern University
 
What Is a House?
Jonathan Massey, Syracuse University
 
Respondent: David Smiley, Barnard College
 

2:00-3:45

Modern Architecture, Colonialism and Race in Fascist Italy
Brian L. McLaren, University of Washington
 
Inventing Early Modern Architecture at the Museum of Modern Art
Joanna Merwood-Salisbury, Parsons The New School for Design
 
Respondent: Claire Zimmerman, University of Michigan
 

3:45-5:30

Beyond the Quotidian: Narratives of Modern Architecture and Everyday Life in France
Tom McDonough, Binghamton University
 
Habitations: On Bodily Habit and Architecture
Aron Vinegar, The Ohio State University
 
Respondent: Zeynep Çelik Alexander, Columbia University
 
All events take place in Wood Auditorium, Avery Hall, Columbia University
 
Click here for more information on The Temple Hoyne Buell Center for the Study of American Architecture, a function of the Columbia University Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation.

Mar 30, 2010


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