miércoles, 24 de marzo de 2010


Landscapes of Urban Memory: The Sacred and the Civic in India's High-Tech City - Smriti Srinivas


A rich analysis of what this Indian city can tell us about the intersections of religion, civic life, and global transformation.
Established in the middle of the sixteenth century, Bangalore has become in our day a center for high-technology research and production, the new "Silicon Valley" of India, with a metropolitan population approaching six million. It is also the site of the very popular annual performance called the "Karaga" dedicated to Draupadi, the polyandrous wife of the heroes of the pan-Indian epic of the Mahabharata.

Through her analysis of this performance and its significance for the sense of the civic in Bangalore, Smitri Srinivas shows how constructions of locality and globality emerge from existing cultural milieus and how articulations of the urban are modes of cultural self-invention tied to historical, spatial, somatic, and ritual practices. The book hightlights cultural practices embedded in urbanization, and moves beyond economistic arguments about globalization or their reliance on the European polis or the American metropolis as models.

Drawing from urban studies, sociology, anthropology, performance studies, religion, and history, Srinivas's work greatly expands our understanding of how the civic is constructed.

Smriti Srinivas is assistant professor of comparative and cultural studies of religion at Ohio State University.



Thomas Fisher, David Salmela, Peter Bastianelli-Kerze “Salmela Architect"

Salmela Architect provides an in-depth look at one of America’s leading “critical regionalist” architects. Salmela’s buildings resolve a central question of our time: how to balance the various extreme positions that characterize contemporary architecture and culture. Salmela accomplishes this by juxtaposing opposites: modernist and traditional forms, open and cellular plans, large and small scales, familiar elements used in unfamiliar ways. His projects range from a small stand-alone sauna to commercial spaces visited by thousands of people, and his buildings, mostly located in the upper Midwest, have become nationally and internationally known.Salmela Architect showcases twenty-six completed buildings and sixteen current projects in lavish color photographs and architectural drawings, enabling readers to get a full sense of the practicality, ethnicity, and playfulness apparent in David Salmela’s work. Architecture critic Thomas Fisher explores Salmela’s propensity to draw from regional roots as he creates designs particular to individual places and cultures yet with universal appeal. Fisher illuminates this synchronicity with buildings as prominent as the Gooseberry Falls Visitors Center and Wild Rice Restaurant as well as residential projects, including the acclaimed Jackson Meadow community and photographer Jim Brandenburg’s Ravenwood Studio.

miércoles, 20 de enero de 2010

DISEÑANDO CON LOS VECINOS - MARTA HARNECKER

Este libro recoge una inédita experiencia de trabajo comunitario: la participación de los pobladores de una manzana en el diseño urbano de un espacio físico.

Para facilitar su lectura, optamos por presentar el material como si se hubiese realizado una gran mesa redonda con todos los participantes, organizándolo por temas, confiando hacer así más accesible al lector la información obtenida por nuestro equipo.

El libro recoge también, como anexo, una entrevista al arquitecto argentino Rodolfo Livingston, acerca de cómo fue ideando el método participativo que utiliza en el diseño de nuevas viviendas y el rediseño de otras.

Esperamos que todo este material sirva de inspiración para quienes, desde el Estado o desde iniciativas comunitarias, estén buscando resolver participativamente el problema habitacional de los sectores populares

domingo, 10 de enero de 2010



Este diseño, como el espíritu general del jardín, se inspiraba en los planteamiento de Antoine-Joseph Dezallier d’Argenville (1680-1765), un naturalista e historiador francés cuya obra, La théorie et la practique du Jardinage, constituyó uno de los principales puntos de referencia de la jardinería española. A su vez, el laberinto de Dezallier copiaba uno que había diseñado Le Nôtre, hoy perdido, para los jardines del Château de Chantilly.

Lo más curioso de este diseño es que parece más complicado perderse que alcanzar el centro, adonde lleva un camino directamente desde la entrada en la parte inferior. Dado el contexto, resulta inevitable pensar que fue diseñado para que los amantes disfrutaran de cierta intimidad en los callejones sin salida de los laterales (a los que cuesta llegar).

Libro:
El laberinto, historia y mito – Marcos Méndez Filesi

Sacado de Exapamicron

martes, 5 de enero de 2010





















Agonico poema de Don Mattera ante la destrucción del suburbio de Johannesburgo; Sophiatown:

Armed with bulldozers
they came
to do a job
nothing more
just hired killers.

We gave way
there was nothing we could do
although the bitterness stung in us
and in the earth around us.

("The Day They Came For Our House")

sábado, 2 de enero de 2010

viernes, 1 de enero de 2010

Amenaza a las ciudades infieles

Comenzó entonces a increpar a las ciudades en que había hecho muchos milagros, porque no habían hecho penitencia:¡Ay de ti, Corazeín; ay de ti, Betsaida!

Due to the condemnation of Jesus, some early Medieval writers believed that the Antichrist would be born in Chorazin. This idea which was referenced by M. R. James in his story "Count Magnus."