The emergence of modern Dublin: reality and representation
Auteur(s): |
Hugh Campbell
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Médium: | article de revue |
Langue(s): | anglais |
Publié dans: | arq: Architectural Research Quarterly, 1997, n. 4, v. 2 |
Page(s): | 44-53 |
DOI: | 10.1017/s1359135500001585 |
Abstrait: |
This paper challenges the predominant reading of Dublin's architectural history whereby the eighteenth century is a golden age of rational urbanism and the nineteenth century represents a collapse into confusion and stasis. It emphasises the different ways in which the city continued to change in the nineteenth century. An examination of James Joyce's changing representation of Dublin - from the ‘scrupulous meanness’ ofDublinersto the exuberance ofUlysses- suggests how an equivalent shift in architectural strategies, from a nostalgia for the formal certainties of Georgian Dublin towards an appreciation of the heterogeneous nineteenth-century city, might produce a new kind of urbanism. |
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