000 02208nam a2200229 a 4500
001 ASIN1907317473
003 OSt
005 20180116192423.0
008 140714s2012 xxu eng d
020 _a1907317473 (paperback)
_c$29.95
020 _a9781907317477 (paperback)
040 _csada
082 _a720.288
_bARR 2012
100 1 _aArrhenius, Thordis.
_97657
245 1 0 _aFragile monument :
_bon conservation and modernity /
_cThordis Arrhenius.
260 _aLondon :
_bBlack Dog Publishing,
_c2012.
300 _a176 p. ;
_c25 cm.
520 _aThe Fragile Monument is a study of the discourse of conservation and its effect on the notion and role of the monument in contemporary western society. Through a revisionist account of the history of conservation, the book explores how the monument has been transformed from an object that originally communicated permanence to an object that is perceived as fragile and in need of protection. The argument put forward is that the expansion and popularisation of conservation is bound to a narrative of loss and danger that reveals a paradoxical relationship between destruction and preservation. In a series of case-studies the book shows how spatial devices have been used to negotiate this paradox and how this use of space has contributed to the defining of the monument as an object of conservation. Throughout its history, conservation has been surrounded by a polemic dominated by concepts of authenticity, origin and authorship. By studying that debate in relation to the case-studies, The Fragile Monument adumbrates the implications these concepts carry with them, both for the discipline of conservation and for the discourse of architecture as a whole. Identifying and examining particular 'sites of conflicts' where critical uncertainty, ambivalence, and heated debates have surrounded the 'object' of restoration, The Fragile Monument contributes significantly to expanding and shifting architectural discourse into a direction of crucial relevance today.
650 _aMonuments
_xConservation and restoration
_97658
856 4 0 _3Amazon.com
_uhttp://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1907317473/chopaconline-20
942 _2ddc
_cBK
999 _c353983
_d353983