This edited book explores and promotes reflection on how the lessons of Metabolism experience can inform current debate on city making and future practice in architectural design and urban planning. More than sixty years after the Metabolist manifesto was published, the authors original contributions highlight the persistent links between present and past that can help to re-imagine new urban futures as well as the design of innovative intra-urban relationships and spaces.
The essays are written by experienced scholars and renowned academics from Japan, Australia, Europe, South Korea and the United States and expose Metabolisms special merits in promoting new urban models and evaluate the current legacy of its architectural projects and urban design lessons. They offer a critical, intellectual, and up-to-date account of the Metabolism projects and ideas with regard to the current evolution of architectural and urbanism discourse in a global context.
The collection of cross-disciplinary contributions in this volume will be of great interest to architects, architectural and urban historians, as well as academics, scholars and students in built environment disciplines and Japanese cultural studies.
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vii | |
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xiii | |
Acknowledgments |
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xvii | |
Foreword: The Logic of Metabolism |
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xix | |
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Introduction |
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1 | (7) |
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1 Back from Behind the Curtain of Oblivion: Metabolism and the Postwar Actuality of Japan |
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8 | (14) |
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2 The Aesthetics and/or Formalism of Change: Paradoxes and Contradictions in the Metabolist Movement |
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22 | (23) |
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3 Engineering a Poetic Techno-urbanism: The Metabolists' Visionary City in Postwar Japan |
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45 | (16) |
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4 The Metabolists in Context |
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61 | (12) |
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5 The Infrastructure of Care: Metabolist Architecture as a Social Catalyst |
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73 | (11) |
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6 "Sunday Carpenter" Metabolism: Artificial-Land Housing and Resident Decision-Making |
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84 | (17) |
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7 Maki and Dutch Team X: Step towards Group Form |
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101 | (13) |
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8 Kiyonori Kikutake circa 2011: Sustaining Life through Metabolism |
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114 | (17) |
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9 Metabolism as Survival Architecture |
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131 | (11) |
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10 Metabolism Adventure: A Personal View |
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142 | (18) |
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11 This is Your City: The Pop Future Foretold by Metabolism |
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160 | (13) |
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12 Spaceship Earth: Metabolist Capsules, the Petro-economy, and Geoengineering |
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173 | (11) |
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13 An Eternal Return? Considering the Temporality and Historicity of Metabolism |
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184 | (11) |
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Afterword |
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195 | (4) |
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Bibliography |
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199 | (10) |
Index |
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209 | |
Raffaele Pernice is an Italian architect and Senior Lecturer in Architecture and Urbanism at the University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia. He holds a Ph.D. in Architecture from Waseda University in Tokyo and a M.Arch. from the University IUAV of Venice in Italy. He has extensive research and teaching experience in Australia, East Asia, and the Middle East, and his interests and activities lie at the nexus of architecture and urbanism, ranging from design practice through to the theory and history of architecture and city planning, with a focus on the evolution of the cities of Japan and the Asia-Pacific region. He has been the recipient of scholarships and grants from universities and national and international institutions, such as the Japanese Ministry of Education (MEXT), the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Japan Foundation, the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT), and the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS).