Selçuk Üniversitesi Dijital Arşiv Sistemi

Architecture and the social frameworks of memory: a postscript to Maurice Halbwachs’ “Collective Memory”

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dc.contributor.author Bilsel, Can
dc.date.accessioned 2017-09-27T12:59:10Z
dc.date.available 2017-09-27T12:59:10Z
dc.date.issued 2017-06-30
dc.date.submitted 2017-05-29
dc.identifier.citation Bilsel, C. (2017). Architecture and the social frameworks of memory: a postscript to Maurice Halbwachs’ “Collective Memory”. Iconarp International Journal of Architecture and Planning, 5 (1), 1-9. tr_TR
dc.identifier.issn 2147-9380
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/6050
dc.description URL: http://iconarp.selcuk.edu.tr/iconarp/article/view/133 tr_TR
dc.description.abstract This paper offers a commentary on Maurice Halwachs’ writings on “collective memory” in the years between 1925-1945. Architectural and urban spaces figure prominently in work of the French sociologist since he maintains that memories survive in the longue durée only to the extent they are indexed into architectural places, and mapped into an urban and historical topography. This comes with a caveat: in his pioneering study of “collective memory,” La topographie légendaire des Évangiles en Terre Sainte: etude de mémoire collective, Halbwachs highlights the discrepancy between the archaeological record preserved in material culture—for example ancient ruins and monuments—and the living memory of a religious community. Likewise, in his study of working classes, Halbwachs’ neologism, “collective memory” is defined as a deliberately unstable, and socially constructed category. The provisional and fluid definition that Halbwachs assigned to “collective memory” offers an insight into our present predicament. In the last decades, the ability of architecture, urban design, and architectural conservation in framing and preserving a stable and unified cultural heritage has been profoundly challenged. This paper makes the case for moving away from merely technical inquiries that understand architecture and places as “sites of memory” to a new direction that builds upon Halbwachs’ social frameworks of memory. It is thanks to Halbwach’s pioneering, if incomplete, work on “collective memory” that we may understand how the emerging and open-ended social formations transform architecture and urban spaces. tr_TR
dc.language.iso en tr_TR
dc.publisher Selcuk University Faculty of Architecture tr_TR
dc.subject Maurice Halbwachs tr_TR
dc.subject Collective memory tr_TR
dc.subject Architecture tr_TR
dc.subject Monuments tr_TR
dc.subject Toplumsal hafıza tr_TR
dc.subject Mimari tr_TR
dc.subject Anıtlar tr_TR
dc.subject Social framework tr_TR
dc.subject Sosyal çerçeve tr_TR
dc.title Architecture and the social frameworks of memory: a postscript to Maurice Halbwachs’ “Collective Memory” tr_TR
dc.type Article tr_TR
dc.relation.journal Iconarp International Journal of Architecture and Planning
dc.relation.journal Iconarp International Journal of Architecture and Planning
dc.identifier.volume 5
dc.identifier.volume 5
dc.identifier.startpage 1
dc.identifier.startpage 1
dc.identifier.endpage 9
dc.identifier.endpage 9


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