CFP: Architecture and Its Image: The 2nd PhilArch Conference

Submission deadline: May 31, 2012

Conference date(s):
October 19, 2012 - October 20, 2012

Go to the conference's page

Conference Venue:

Department of Philosophy, Boston University
Boston, United States

Topic areas

Details

Architecture and Image
The 2nd PhilArch Conference
October 19-20, 2012
Boston University, Department of Philosophy

What is architecture? How is architecture understood and how should it be understood? With the rise of phenomena such as ‘starchitects,’ avant-garde investigations of different creative mediums, parametricism, and contemporary forms of architectural pragmatism, and with the increasing specialization of construction processes, how do we identify when something is and is not architecture? Or have questions of architectural identity simply become irrelevant?

The 2nd PhilArch conference calls for a return to, or continuation of, explicitly philosophical inquiry into the character of architecture. In particular the conference seeks papers on the theme of architecture and its ‘image,’ broadly construed. Topics may address questions such as: Is architecture constituted by its history or by an atemporal, formal structure? Is a pure architectural object possible? What role should marginal practices play in the conceptualization of architecture? What is architectural representation? What is the relationship between models, drawings, and images and built architecture? Is architecture always the re-presentation of other content, or does it create its own meanings?

Keynote Speakers

Dr. Sylvia Lavin :: Professor of Architecture History and Theory
UCLA :: Department of Architecture and Urban Design

Dr. David Kolb :: Charles A. Dana Professor Emeritus of Philosophy
Bates College :: Department of Philosophy and Religion

 Call for Papers

The Boston University Department of Philosophy invites the submission of papers from diverse philosophical backgrounds aimed at the careful clarification of architectural thought. Preference will be given to papers related to the conference theme.

Send complete papers (3,000-5,000 words) with a 150 word abstract, formatted for blind review, to [email protected] by May 31, 2012.

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Download a PDF of the call for papers.

For questions, contact the conference organizers ([email protected]).

This conference is made possible by the generous financial support of the Boston University Center for the Humanities and Department of Philosophy. The co-organizers are Dr. Daniel Dahlstrom, Elizabeth Robinson, and Bryan Norwood.

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