The Architecture of Phantasmagoria: Specters of the City
English
By (author): Libero Andreotti Nadir Lahiji
In a time of mass-mediated modernity, the city becomes, almost by definition, a constitutively mediated city. Today, more than ever before, the omnipresence of media in every sphere of culture is creating a new urban ontology, saturating, fracturing, and exacerbating the manifold experience of city life. The authors describe this condition as one of 'hyper-mediation' a qualitatively new phase in the citys historical evolution. The concept of phantasmagoria has pride of place in their study; using it as an all-embracing explanatory framework, they explore its meanings as a critical category to understand the culture, and the architecture, of the contemporary city.
Andreotti and Lahiji argue that any account of architecture that does not include understanding the role and function of media and its impact on the city in the present tele-technological-capitalist society is fundamentally flawed and incomplete. Their approach moves from Walter Benjamin, through the concepts of phantasmagoria and of media as theorized also by Theodor Adorno, Siegfried Kracauer, and a new generation of contemporary critics towards a new socio-critical and aesthetic analysis of the mediated space of the contemporary city.
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