دانلود کتاب H Blocks: An architecture of the conflict in and about Northern Ireland
by Louise Purbrick
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عنوان فارسی: بلوک H: معماری درگیری در ایرلند شمالی و در مورد آن |
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جزییات کتاب
Based on a long-standing site-specific investigation, and drawing on a range of sources from architectural plans to photographs of street protests, H Blocks explores the material relationship between the prison as a built articulation of power and its inhabitants, highlighting the ethical and political roles that architecture can play in situations of conflict. It also addresses the afterlife of such sites after the end of conflict and how they can adapt to the changing cultural meanings of their space.
The book demonstrates how the conflicted histories of the prison are configured in its design and destruction, and the inhabitation and attempted preservation of the site itself, revealing how its architecture is bound up with questions of power and resistance, embodiment and attachment, witnessing and remembering, the materiality of history and its commodification.
H Blocks is about the power of architecture and image. It examines the spaces of the H shaped cell units of Long Kesh/Maze prison and how they were inhabited. It is an exploration of the material relationships of political imprisonment in a British jail in Ireland. In its various phases, from architectural plan to post-ceasefire ruin, the H Blocks are a material form of conflict in and about Northern Ireland that carried a highly significant symbolic load. Representations of the H Blocks are integral to the struggle over their meaning, part of their history and historical record. But H Blocks is not an official history. Its sources are the site itself, the voices of prisoners and prison visitors and an array of images and objects that comprise the material culture of Long Kesh/Maze. Each chapter explores a fragment of its material record: the design of the H Blocks, the resistance from its cells, the global witnesses to the oppression of imprisonment, the female visitors and war of waiting, the murals of a liberated zone and the sale of material culture of Long Kesh/Maze. Each chapter also offers a different theoretical lens through which to understand these fragments: panopticism and its critique, dwelling perspectives, necropolitics and the rights-bearing body, a feminist spatial theory and the practice of writing, performativity, the appropriations of commodity culture and agency of objects.