Historic preservation theory: an anthology—readings from the 18th to the 21st Century, edited by Jorge Otero-Pailos. Design books, 2022. 608pp. ISBN9780578547145

Q1 Arts and Humanities
Edward Denison
{"title":"Historic preservation theory: an anthology—readings from the 18th to the 21st Century, edited by Jorge Otero-Pailos. Design books, 2022. 608pp. ISBN9780578547145","authors":"Edward Denison","doi":"10.1186/s43238-024-00130-7","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<img alt=\"\" src=\"//media.springernature.com/lw386/springer-static/image/art%3A10.1186%2Fs43238-024-00130-7/MediaObjects/43238_2024_130_Figa_HTML.png\"/><p>As the world confronts a confluence of existential crises at the start of the new millennium, an anthology of theories concerned with historic preservation makes an important and timely contribution in and beyond the field. With the early 21st century increasingly feeling like an age of reckoning, the hangover after centuries of profligacy, this collection of writings helps us to not only reassess our collective built pasts, but also to ponder historic preservation’s vital role in built futures. Containing 96 texts spanning four centuries, this anthology is an outstanding teaching resource that will be an essential entry on the reading list of any course concerned with historic built environments, indeed any built environment. The editor, Professor Jorge Otero-Pailos of Columbia University’s Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation (GSAPP), says the aim was ‘to give students access to that wider international and historical perspective so they could gain a solid footing in the rich intellectual traditions that nourish historic preservation theory’. It achieves these aims admirably.</p><p>The content of this weighty 584-page volume comprises a variety of primary sources spanning various geographies, disciplines, and epochs. The earliest writings date from the mid-18th century and some are translated into English for the first time (e.g. Henri Grégoire’s ‘<i>Rapport sur les destructions opérées par le vandalisme, et sur les moyens de le réprimer</i>’). Although billed as theories, which Otero-Pailos defines as ‘an intellectual method for developing knowledge’, the strength of this collection is in its diversity and includes core texts, key ideas, seminal writings, various treatises, and radical manifestoes. These are prefaced by Otero-Pailos’s excellent Introduction, which succinctly explains the rationale for the book, its context and content, and, perhaps most revealingly, its absences. He also acknowledges the discipline’s ambiguity emanating from its contested history, carefully disentangling some of its knottier roots, while making the case that this ambiguity is precisely what makes the field so rich, resilient, and intellectually nourishing.</p><p>Every entry is helpfully accompanied by a prefatory summary. These individual introductions are one of the book’s many laudable features, offering vital perspectives and astute observations that, for a younger generation accustomed to textural brevity, will do much to aid student engagement in the works. As for the actual texts, accompanying the usual suspects – Jacobs, Morris, Ruskin, Viollet-le-Duc, etc. – are a cast of characters who, although distinguished in their respective fields, will not likely have taken centre stage alongside so many other more referenced thinkers and doers in the context of historic preservation. The work of the 19th century Cherokee novelist, John Rollin Ridge, for example, appears in his 1854 poem, <i>Mount Shasta</i>, an elegy to the spiritual and ‘unpolluted grandeur’ of this majestic volcanic peak in northern California. Another rare appearance is that of Liang Sicheng, the celebrated Chinese architectural historian who’s impassioned 1944 essay, ‘<i>Why we must research Chinese traditional architecture</i>’, is an ode to the ancient craft of building and its precarity in the face of modernity.</p><p>As with so many examples in this volume, the lessons do not apply only to the contexts in which they are written, whether culturally, geographically, or temporally, but also have resonance and meaning across time and place. Indeed, some are as pertinent, if not more so, now as they were when they were written. As the righteous cries for restitution of plundered or purchased cultural assets around the world grow louder in the 21st century, Victor Hugo’s despair in <i>War on the Demolishers!</i> (1825, 1832) while watching the English procure the debris of Jumièges Abbey assumes a special resonance two centuries later. The mutually assured destruction of a nation’s cultural heritage caused by French profiteering from Lord Elgin’s desecrations, elicited Hugo’s terse response: ‘The Turks sold only Greek monuments; we do even better, we sell our own’.</p><p>Such snippets are but a tiny fraction of the immense wealth of material in this anthology. There is so much to savour, learn, and enjoy from the collection, which starts in 1755 with Johann Joachim Winckelmann’s <i>‘Thoughts on the Imitation of the Painting and Sculpture of the Greeks.’</i> It is perhaps instructive that Winckelmann is first up. Whether in deference to or aligned with the founding father of the linear chronological method (that still dominates the periodisation of western art and architectural history), this anthology is also categorised chronologically. The entries are distributed relatively evenly between 1755 and 2009, where it concludes with Giorgio Agamben’s <i>‘Philosophical Archaeology’</i>. The decision to organise this collection chronologically is a curious one. Otero-Pailos’s claim that it is ‘the standard today’ feels misaligned with the historiographical and pedagogical concerns and priorities of the 21st century, which has borne witness to growing interest in temporal realignment and a rapid intensification of decentring (what some call decolonising), which owe so much to the psychosis of progress and its straight-jacket of linear time. An alternative approach, such as thematic categorisations, might have helped to unshackle these works from their historical moorings fixed during the height of European imperial expansion. It is within this framing that the spectre of coloniality looms large.</p><p>There is no doubt the book’s adherence to Western temporality and temporal traditions is a fair reflection of its content, intellectually, historically, and structurally. As the book states, the selection mirrors the historical reality of how the discipline of historic preservation developed out of the European Enlightenment to become enshrined in international organisations, laws, and practices associated with sustaining the built past. However, what feels more telling are the reasons for beginning at the European Enlightenment. In arguing that this is where ‘some of the ideas and core principles emerged that still define how we understand historic preservation today’, it is unclear who ‘we’ are? For Winckelmann it is obvious. ‘We’ refers to ‘all the politer world’ that can claim descendance from ancient Greece. For the impolite others represented by what the anti-racist scholar and educator Rosemary Campbell-Stephens has more recently coined the ‘global majority’, the definition, meaning, and purpose of historic preservation three centuries later remains conspicuously elusive (Campbell-Stephens 2021).</p><p>It is important to emphasise here that this book, despite interpretations in some of the prefatory endorsements, does not pretend to be global in scope. Otero-Pailos is crystal clear in explaining his selection. He is also explicit in defining his intended readership as American students. ‘We’, therefore, likely reflects this target audience. As this book claims, the theory and practice of historic preservation as it is known today throughout much of the world, like so many modern academic traditions and, for some, modernity itself, owes a significant debt – and perhaps even its existence – to the European Enlightenment. However, this begs the question whether accepting this provenance does more to constrain or expand the discipline in the present and for the future?</p><p>This is too big a question to place on the shoulders of this anthology, but it is one that needs to be answered by historians and teachers of art and architecture in the 21st century and beyond. It is one Otero-Pailos is clearly aware of and willing to confront: ‘Beginning this anthology with the Enlightenment does not mean an uncritical endorsement of the intellectual tradition that ensued from it’. In an age of widespread historiographical reckoning, how do we disentangle the knotted roots of our collective and often deeply troubled pasts so that we might enable more hopeful futures? Is it sufficient to assemble a body of works that reflects ‘the very European-American cultural points of view that have historically structured the discipline in the United States’ so as to appeal to a target audience made up of its members or is it possible to challenge that audience while simultaneously appealing to new audiences by reframing the discipline, offering new perspectives on its pasts, present, and possible futures? These are inescapable and existential questions for all of us trying to teach in a planetary age and Otero-Pailos’ inspiring work is among those leading the way in offering meaningful responses.</p><p>Making no claim to comprehensiveness or expertise ‘in Asia, Africa, the Arab world, or among First Nations,’ the book confers this task on future scholars. Racism and genocide, as Otero-Pailos points out, have been obstinate, debilitating, and erasing factors that have constrained and obscured our understanding of the past globally. But the question remains – how do we redress this in the present and for the future? What does redressing historiographical inequity look like? Of the nearly one hundred entries in this anthology, those representing the experiences or perspectives of those outside Europe or North America can be counted on one hand. Even with rare examples by non-white authors like Ridge and Liang, their inclusion is largely owed to their ability to speak to white men rather than a demonstration of white man’s desire to speak to or learn from them. As is common with histories of disciplines with inherently white European roots, historiographical inequity casts a long shadow racially, geographically, and in other ways too. Gender is a notable example. By this measure, the paucity of entries by women – 7.5 of 96 – feels telling.</p><p>In an age of planetary pedagogies (and crisis), the demands on educators and educational institutions to include more voices, to be accessible to more diverse audiences, and to challenge the institutional and disciplinary structures we have inherited are growing exponentially. This requires deeper and more critical international collaborations in the 21st century and beyond, wherein the challenges are fundamentally different and greater than those in the 20th century and before. Time is running out. Disciplinary foundations and functions need to be urgently recast rather than reinforced.</p><p>An example from the heritage field is the global collaborative, MoHoA (<i>Modern Heritage of Africa / Modern Heritage in the Anthropocene</i>), established in 2020 with the aim of contributing to reframing and decentring the theory and practice of modern heritage in a planetary age.<sup><span>Footnote </span>1</sup> Acknowledging that modern heritage – inextricably bound as it is to Western notions of progress, modernisation, and modernity – uniquely and disproportionately privileges western, invariably white, experiences and values, MoHoA joins the wider global effort to decolonise institutional practices that engage with the research, collection, valorisation, or transformation of material culture associated with our collective recent past. An important outcome of this collective and restitutive endeavour is <i>The Cape Town Document on Modern Heritage</i>, an equitable and decentring policy proposal presented in 2023 to UNESCO and its advisory bodies (MoHoA 2024) – vestiges of what Otero-Pailos refers to as the ‘post war consensus of a Eurocentric world view of historic preservation’.</p><p>Recasting our disciplinary foundations and functions is especially pertinent to historic preservation, which should be positioning itself not as it has done historically as peripheral to the built environment professions, but radically and assertively at the centre. With the construction industry accounting for 40% of global CO2 emissions (not to mention the myriad other metrics associated with extraction, transportation, and construction), our survival will literally depend on preserving, conserving, and adapting what we have already built rather than building anew. This aligns with what Otero-Pailos calls an ethic of care. Our schools of architecture and the discipline they serve, and indeed our species, will depend on us centring the principles and practices of a fundamentally reconstituted form of restoration. Unlike at any other time in human history, the greatest challenge for architects and architecture will be working with what already exists; a practice antithetical to the tabula rasa dependence of starchitecture and late-capitalist individualism of recent yore yet demanding far greater intelligence, creativity, and ingenuity. Writings that speak to this future imperative would have made a welcome contribution but feel conspicuous by their absence.</p><p>On the penultimate page of this volume, perhaps too easily overlooked, is a brilliant feature that goes some way to addressing and redressing any imbalances in the printed version. A QR code takes readers to a world map peppered with hyperlinked pins directing them to further readings and other related media. Simple, but effective, this function joins similar digital platforms using technology to radically decentre global knowledges associated with built environment histories, theories, pedagogies, and practices. Otero-Pailos and his collaborators have produced an exceptional gift to students, teachers, and practitioners with this anthology. By inviting future generations of scholars to develop this work is a call to arms for those, to paraphrase Otero-Pailos, embarking on their own exciting journey within historic preservation. They could not have a better point of departure.</p><p>Not applicable.</p><ol><li data-counter=\"1.\"><p>www.mohoa.org.</p></li></ol><ul data-track-component=\"outbound reference\"><li><p>Campbell-Stephens, R. M. 2021. <i>Educational leadership and the global majority: decolonising narratives</i>. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan.</p></li><li><p>MoHoA Participants. 2024. The Cape Town Document on Modern Heritage (2022). <i>Curator: The Museum Journal</i> 67 (1): 35–42.</p><p>Article Google Scholar </p></li></ul><p>Download references<svg aria-hidden=\"true\" focusable=\"false\" height=\"16\" role=\"img\" width=\"16\"><use xlink:href=\"#icon-eds-i-download-medium\" xmlns:xlink=\"http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink\"></use></svg></p><p>Not applicable.</p><p>Not applicable.</p><h3>Authors and Affiliations</h3><ol><li><p>The Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL, 22 Gordon Street, WC1H 0QB, London, UK</p><p>Edward Denison</p></li></ol><span>Authors</span><ol><li><span>Edward Denison</span>View author publications<p>You can also search for this author in <span>PubMed<span> </span>Google Scholar</span></p></li></ol><h3>Contributions</h3><p>The author read and approved the final manuscript.</p><h3>Corresponding author</h3><p>Correspondence to Edward Denison.</p><h3>Competing interests</h3>\n<p>The author declare that he has no competing interests.</p><h3>Publisher’s Note</h3><p>Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.</p><p><b>Open Access</b> This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article's Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article's Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.</p>\n<p>Reprints and permissions</p><img alt=\"Check for updates. Verify currency and authenticity via CrossMark\" height=\"81\" loading=\"lazy\" src=\"data:image/svg+xml;base64,<svg height="81" width="57" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg"><g fill="none" fill-rule="evenodd"><path d="m17.35 35.45 21.3-14.2v-17.03h-21.3" fill="#989898"/><path d="m38.65 35.45-21.3-14.2v-17.03h21.3" fill="#747474"/><path d="m28 .5c-12.98 0-23.5 10.52-23.5 23.5s10.52 23.5 23.5 23.5 23.5-10.52 23.5-23.5c0-6.23-2.48-12.21-6.88-16.62-4.41-4.4-10.39-6.88-16.62-6.88zm0 41.25c-9.8 0-17.75-7.95-17.75-17.75s7.95-17.75 17.75-17.75 17.75 7.95 17.75 17.75c0 4.71-1.87 9.22-5.2 12.55s-7.84 5.2-12.55 5.2z" fill="#535353"/><path d="m41 36c-5.81 6.23-15.23 7.45-22.43 2.9-7.21-4.55-10.16-13.57-7.03-21.5l-4.92-3.11c-4.95 10.7-1.19 23.42 8.78 29.71 9.97 6.3 23.07 4.22 30.6-4.86z" fill="#9c9c9c"/><path d="m.2 58.45c0-.75.11-1.42.33-2.01s.52-1.09.91-1.5c.38-.41.83-.73 1.34-.94.51-.22 1.06-.32 1.65-.32.56 0 1.06.11 1.51.35.44.23.81.5 1.1.81l-.91 1.01c-.24-.24-.49-.42-.75-.56-.27-.13-.58-.2-.93-.2-.39 0-.73.08-1.05.23-.31.16-.58.37-.81.66-.23.28-.41.63-.53 1.04-.13.41-.19.88-.19 1.39 0 1.04.23 1.86.68 2.46.45.59 1.06.88 1.84.88.41 0 .77-.07 1.07-.23s.59-.39.85-.68l.91 1c-.38.43-.8.76-1.28.99-.47.22-1 .34-1.58.34-.59 0-1.13-.1-1.64-.31-.5-.2-.94-.51-1.31-.91-.38-.4-.67-.9-.88-1.48-.22-.59-.33-1.26-.33-2.02zm8.4-5.33h1.61v2.54l-.05 1.33c.29-.27.61-.51.96-.72s.76-.31 1.24-.31c.73 0 1.27.23 1.61.71.33.47.5 1.14.5 2.02v4.31h-1.61v-4.1c0-.57-.08-.97-.25-1.21-.17-.23-.45-.35-.83-.35-.3 0-.56.08-.79.22-.23.15-.49.36-.78.64v4.8h-1.61zm7.37 6.45c0-.56.09-1.06.26-1.51.18-.45.42-.83.71-1.14.29-.3.63-.54 1.01-.71.39-.17.78-.25 1.18-.25.47 0 .88.08 1.23.24.36.16.65.38.89.67s.42.63.54 1.03c.12.41.18.84.18 1.32 0 .32-.02.57-.07.76h-4.36c.07.62.29 1.1.65 1.44.36.33.82.5 1.38.5.29 0 .57-.04.83-.13s.51-.21.76-.37l.55 1.01c-.33.21-.69.39-1.09.53-.41.14-.83.21-1.26.21-.48 0-.92-.08-1.34-.25-.41-.16-.76-.4-1.07-.7-.31-.31-.55-.69-.72-1.13-.18-.44-.26-.95-.26-1.52zm4.6-.62c0-.55-.11-.98-.34-1.28-.23-.31-.58-.47-1.06-.47-.41 0-.77.15-1.07.45-.31.29-.5.73-.58 1.3zm2.5.62c0-.57.09-1.08.28-1.53.18-.44.43-.82.75-1.13s.69-.54 1.1-.71c.42-.16.85-.24 1.31-.24.45 0 .84.08 1.17.23s.61.34.85.57l-.77 1.02c-.19-.16-.38-.28-.56-.37-.19-.09-.39-.14-.61-.14-.56 0-1.01.21-1.35.63-.35.41-.52.97-.52 1.67 0 .69.17 1.24.51 1.66.34.41.78.62 1.32.62.28 0 .54-.06.78-.17.24-.12.45-.26.64-.42l.67 1.03c-.33.29-.69.51-1.08.65-.39.15-.78.23-1.18.23-.46 0-.9-.08-1.31-.24-.4-.16-.75-.39-1.05-.7s-.53-.69-.7-1.13c-.17-.45-.25-.96-.25-1.53zm6.91-6.45h1.58v6.17h.05l2.54-3.16h1.77l-2.35 2.8 2.59 4.07h-1.75l-1.77-2.98-1.08 1.23v1.75h-1.58zm13.69 1.27c-.25-.11-.5-.17-.75-.17-.58 0-.87.39-.87 1.16v.75h1.34v1.27h-1.34v5.6h-1.61v-5.6h-.92v-1.2l.92-.07v-.72c0-.35.04-.68.13-.98.08-.31.21-.57.4-.79s.42-.39.71-.51c.28-.12.63-.18 1.04-.18.24 0 .48.02.69.07.22.05.41.1.57.17zm.48 5.18c0-.57.09-1.08.27-1.53.17-.44.41-.82.72-1.13.3-.31.65-.54 1.04-.71.39-.16.8-.24 1.23-.24s.84.08 1.24.24c.4.17.74.4 1.04.71s.54.69.72 1.13c.19.45.28.96.28 1.53s-.09 1.08-.28 1.53c-.18.44-.42.82-.72 1.13s-.64.54-1.04.7-.81.24-1.24.24-.84-.08-1.23-.24-.74-.39-1.04-.7c-.31-.31-.55-.69-.72-1.13-.18-.45-.27-.96-.27-1.53zm1.65 0c0 .69.14 1.24.43 1.66.28.41.68.62 1.18.62.51 0 .9-.21 1.19-.62.29-.42.44-.97.44-1.66 0-.7-.15-1.26-.44-1.67-.29-.42-.68-.63-1.19-.63-.5 0-.9.21-1.18.63-.29.41-.43.97-.43 1.67zm6.48-3.44h1.33l.12 1.21h.05c.24-.44.54-.79.88-1.02.35-.24.7-.36 1.07-.36.32 0 .59.05.78.14l-.28 1.4-.33-.09c-.11-.01-.23-.02-.38-.02-.27 0-.56.1-.86.31s-.55.58-.77 1.1v4.2h-1.61zm-47.87 15h1.61v4.1c0 .57.08.97.25 1.2.17.24.44.35.81.35.3 0 .57-.07.8-.22.22-.15.47-.39.73-.73v-4.7h1.61v6.87h-1.32l-.12-1.01h-.04c-.3.36-.63.64-.98.86-.35.21-.76.32-1.24.32-.73 0-1.27-.24-1.61-.71-.33-.47-.5-1.14-.5-2.02zm9.46 7.43v2.16h-1.61v-9.59h1.33l.12.72h.05c.29-.24.61-.45.97-.63.35-.17.72-.26 1.1-.26.43 0 .81.08 1.15.24.33.17.61.4.84.71.24.31.41.68.53 1.11.13.42.19.91.19 1.44 0 .59-.09 1.11-.25 1.57-.16.47-.38.85-.65 1.16-.27.32-.58.56-.94.73-.35.16-.72.25-1.1.25-.3 0-.6-.07-.9-.2s-.59-.31-.87-.56zm0-2.3c.26.22.5.37.73.45.24.09.46.13.66.13.46 0 .84-.2 1.15-.6.31-.39.46-.98.46-1.77 0-.69-.12-1.22-.35-1.61-.23-.38-.61-.57-1.13-.57-.49 0-.99.26-1.52.77zm5.87-1.69c0-.56.08-1.06.25-1.51.16-.45.37-.83.65-1.14.27-.3.58-.54.93-.71s.71-.25 1.08-.25c.39 0 .73.07 1 .2.27.14.54.32.81.55l-.06-1.1v-2.49h1.61v9.88h-1.33l-.11-.74h-.06c-.25.25-.54.46-.88.64-.33.18-.69.27-1.06.27-.87 0-1.56-.32-2.07-.95s-.76-1.51-.76-2.65zm1.67-.01c0 .74.13 1.31.4 1.7.26.38.65.58 1.15.58.51 0 .99-.26 1.44-.77v-3.21c-.24-.21-.48-.36-.7-.45-.23-.08-.46-.12-.7-.12-.45 0-.82.19-1.13.59-.31.39-.46.95-.46 1.68zm6.35 1.59c0-.73.32-1.3.97-1.71.64-.4 1.67-.68 3.08-.84 0-.17-.02-.34-.07-.51-.05-.16-.12-.3-.22-.43s-.22-.22-.38-.3c-.15-.06-.34-.1-.58-.1-.34 0-.68.07-1 .2s-.63.29-.93.47l-.59-1.08c.39-.24.81-.45 1.28-.63.47-.17.99-.26 1.54-.26.86 0 1.51.25 1.93.76s.63 1.25.63 2.21v4.07h-1.32l-.12-.76h-.05c-.3.27-.63.48-.98.66s-.73.27-1.14.27c-.61 0-1.1-.19-1.48-.56-.38-.36-.57-.85-.57-1.46zm1.57-.12c0 .3.09.53.27.67.19.14.42.21.71.21.28 0 .54-.07.77-.2s.48-.31.73-.56v-1.54c-.47.06-.86.13-1.18.23-.31.09-.57.19-.76.31s-.33.25-.41.4c-.09.15-.13.31-.13.48zm6.29-3.63h-.98v-1.2l1.06-.07.2-1.88h1.34v1.88h1.75v1.27h-1.75v3.28c0 .8.32 1.2.97 1.2.12 0 .24-.01.37-.04.12-.03.24-.07.34-.11l.28 1.19c-.19.06-.4.12-.64.17-.23.05-.49.08-.76.08-.4 0-.74-.06-1.02-.18-.27-.13-.49-.3-.67-.52-.17-.21-.3-.48-.37-.78-.08-.3-.12-.64-.12-1.01zm4.36 2.17c0-.56.09-1.06.27-1.51s.41-.83.71-1.14c.29-.3.63-.54 1.01-.71.39-.17.78-.25 1.18-.25.47 0 .88.08 1.23.24.36.16.65.38.89.67s.42.63.54 1.03c.12.41.18.84.18 1.32 0 .32-.02.57-.07.76h-4.37c.08.62.29 1.1.65 1.44.36.33.82.5 1.38.5.3 0 .58-.04.84-.13.25-.09.51-.21.76-.37l.54 1.01c-.32.21-.69.39-1.09.53s-.82.21-1.26.21c-.47 0-.92-.08-1.33-.25-.41-.16-.77-.4-1.08-.7-.3-.31-.54-.69-.72-1.13-.17-.44-.26-.95-.26-1.52zm4.61-.62c0-.55-.11-.98-.34-1.28-.23-.31-.58-.47-1.06-.47-.41 0-.77.15-1.08.45-.31.29-.5.73-.57 1.3zm3.01 2.23c.31.24.61.43.92.57.3.13.63.2.98.2.38 0 .65-.08.83-.23s.27-.35.27-.6c0-.14-.05-.26-.13-.37-.08-.1-.2-.2-.34-.28-.14-.09-.29-.16-.47-.23l-.53-.22c-.23-.09-.46-.18-.69-.3-.23-.11-.44-.24-.62-.4s-.33-.35-.45-.55c-.12-.21-.18-.46-.18-.75 0-.61.23-1.1.68-1.49.44-.38 1.06-.57 1.83-.57.48 0 .91.08 1.29.25s.71.36.99.57l-.74.98c-.24-.17-.49-.32-.73-.42-.25-.11-.51-.16-.78-.16-.35 0-.6.07-.76.21-.17.15-.25.33-.25.54 0 .14.04.26.12.36s.18.18.31.26c.14.07.29.14.46.21l.54.19c.23.09.47.18.7.29s.44.24.64.4c.19.16.34.35.46.58.11.23.17.5.17.82 0 .3-.06.58-.17.83-.12.26-.29.48-.51.68-.23.19-.51.34-.84.45-.34.11-.72.17-1.15.17-.48 0-.95-.09-1.41-.27-.46-.19-.86-.41-1.2-.68z" fill="#535353"/></g></svg>\" width=\"57\"/><h3>Cite this article</h3><p>Denison, E. Historic preservation theory: an anthology—readings from the 18th to the 21st Century, edited by Jorge Otero-Pailos. Design books, 2022. 608pp. ISBN9780578547145. <i>Built Heritage</i> <b>8</b>, 17 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1186/s43238-024-00130-7</p><p>Download citation<svg aria-hidden=\"true\" focusable=\"false\" height=\"16\" role=\"img\" width=\"16\"><use xlink:href=\"#icon-eds-i-download-medium\" xmlns:xlink=\"http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink\"></use></svg></p><ul data-test=\"publication-history\"><li><p>Received<span>: </span><span><time datetime=\"2024-04-06\">06 April 2024</time></span></p></li><li><p>Accepted<span>: </span><span><time datetime=\"2024-04-22\">22 April 2024</time></span></p></li><li><p>Published<span>: </span><span><time datetime=\"2024-05-28\">28 May 2024</time></span></p></li><li><p>DOI</abbr><span>: </span><span>https://doi.org/10.1186/s43238-024-00130-7</span></p></li></ul><h3>Share this article</h3><p>Anyone you share the following link with will be able to read this content:</p><button data-track=\"click\" data-track-action=\"get shareable link\" data-track-external=\"\" data-track-label=\"button\" type=\"button\">Get shareable link</button><p>Sorry, a shareable link is not currently available for this article.</p><p data-track=\"click\" data-track-action=\"select share url\" data-track-label=\"button\"></p><button data-track=\"click\" data-track-action=\"copy share url\" data-track-external=\"\" data-track-label=\"button\" type=\"button\">Copy to clipboard</button><p> Provided by the Springer Nature SharedIt content-sharing initiative </p>","PeriodicalId":33925,"journal":{"name":"Built Heritage","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-05-28","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Built Heritage","FirstCategoryId":"1087","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1186/s43238-024-00130-7","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"Arts and Humanities","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract Image

As the world confronts a confluence of existential crises at the start of the new millennium, an anthology of theories concerned with historic preservation makes an important and timely contribution in and beyond the field. With the early 21st century increasingly feeling like an age of reckoning, the hangover after centuries of profligacy, this collection of writings helps us to not only reassess our collective built pasts, but also to ponder historic preservation’s vital role in built futures. Containing 96 texts spanning four centuries, this anthology is an outstanding teaching resource that will be an essential entry on the reading list of any course concerned with historic built environments, indeed any built environment. The editor, Professor Jorge Otero-Pailos of Columbia University’s Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation (GSAPP), says the aim was ‘to give students access to that wider international and historical perspective so they could gain a solid footing in the rich intellectual traditions that nourish historic preservation theory’. It achieves these aims admirably.

The content of this weighty 584-page volume comprises a variety of primary sources spanning various geographies, disciplines, and epochs. The earliest writings date from the mid-18th century and some are translated into English for the first time (e.g. Henri Grégoire’s ‘Rapport sur les destructions opérées par le vandalisme, et sur les moyens de le réprimer’). Although billed as theories, which Otero-Pailos defines as ‘an intellectual method for developing knowledge’, the strength of this collection is in its diversity and includes core texts, key ideas, seminal writings, various treatises, and radical manifestoes. These are prefaced by Otero-Pailos’s excellent Introduction, which succinctly explains the rationale for the book, its context and content, and, perhaps most revealingly, its absences. He also acknowledges the discipline’s ambiguity emanating from its contested history, carefully disentangling some of its knottier roots, while making the case that this ambiguity is precisely what makes the field so rich, resilient, and intellectually nourishing.

Every entry is helpfully accompanied by a prefatory summary. These individual introductions are one of the book’s many laudable features, offering vital perspectives and astute observations that, for a younger generation accustomed to textural brevity, will do much to aid student engagement in the works. As for the actual texts, accompanying the usual suspects – Jacobs, Morris, Ruskin, Viollet-le-Duc, etc. – are a cast of characters who, although distinguished in their respective fields, will not likely have taken centre stage alongside so many other more referenced thinkers and doers in the context of historic preservation. The work of the 19th century Cherokee novelist, John Rollin Ridge, for example, appears in his 1854 poem, Mount Shasta, an elegy to the spiritual and ‘unpolluted grandeur’ of this majestic volcanic peak in northern California. Another rare appearance is that of Liang Sicheng, the celebrated Chinese architectural historian who’s impassioned 1944 essay, ‘Why we must research Chinese traditional architecture’, is an ode to the ancient craft of building and its precarity in the face of modernity.

As with so many examples in this volume, the lessons do not apply only to the contexts in which they are written, whether culturally, geographically, or temporally, but also have resonance and meaning across time and place. Indeed, some are as pertinent, if not more so, now as they were when they were written. As the righteous cries for restitution of plundered or purchased cultural assets around the world grow louder in the 21st century, Victor Hugo’s despair in War on the Demolishers! (1825, 1832) while watching the English procure the debris of Jumièges Abbey assumes a special resonance two centuries later. The mutually assured destruction of a nation’s cultural heritage caused by French profiteering from Lord Elgin’s desecrations, elicited Hugo’s terse response: ‘The Turks sold only Greek monuments; we do even better, we sell our own’.

Such snippets are but a tiny fraction of the immense wealth of material in this anthology. There is so much to savour, learn, and enjoy from the collection, which starts in 1755 with Johann Joachim Winckelmann’s ‘Thoughts on the Imitation of the Painting and Sculpture of the Greeks.’ It is perhaps instructive that Winckelmann is first up. Whether in deference to or aligned with the founding father of the linear chronological method (that still dominates the periodisation of western art and architectural history), this anthology is also categorised chronologically. The entries are distributed relatively evenly between 1755 and 2009, where it concludes with Giorgio Agamben’s ‘Philosophical Archaeology’. The decision to organise this collection chronologically is a curious one. Otero-Pailos’s claim that it is ‘the standard today’ feels misaligned with the historiographical and pedagogical concerns and priorities of the 21st century, which has borne witness to growing interest in temporal realignment and a rapid intensification of decentring (what some call decolonising), which owe so much to the psychosis of progress and its straight-jacket of linear time. An alternative approach, such as thematic categorisations, might have helped to unshackle these works from their historical moorings fixed during the height of European imperial expansion. It is within this framing that the spectre of coloniality looms large.

There is no doubt the book’s adherence to Western temporality and temporal traditions is a fair reflection of its content, intellectually, historically, and structurally. As the book states, the selection mirrors the historical reality of how the discipline of historic preservation developed out of the European Enlightenment to become enshrined in international organisations, laws, and practices associated with sustaining the built past. However, what feels more telling are the reasons for beginning at the European Enlightenment. In arguing that this is where ‘some of the ideas and core principles emerged that still define how we understand historic preservation today’, it is unclear who ‘we’ are? For Winckelmann it is obvious. ‘We’ refers to ‘all the politer world’ that can claim descendance from ancient Greece. For the impolite others represented by what the anti-racist scholar and educator Rosemary Campbell-Stephens has more recently coined the ‘global majority’, the definition, meaning, and purpose of historic preservation three centuries later remains conspicuously elusive (Campbell-Stephens 2021).

It is important to emphasise here that this book, despite interpretations in some of the prefatory endorsements, does not pretend to be global in scope. Otero-Pailos is crystal clear in explaining his selection. He is also explicit in defining his intended readership as American students. ‘We’, therefore, likely reflects this target audience. As this book claims, the theory and practice of historic preservation as it is known today throughout much of the world, like so many modern academic traditions and, for some, modernity itself, owes a significant debt – and perhaps even its existence – to the European Enlightenment. However, this begs the question whether accepting this provenance does more to constrain or expand the discipline in the present and for the future?

This is too big a question to place on the shoulders of this anthology, but it is one that needs to be answered by historians and teachers of art and architecture in the 21st century and beyond. It is one Otero-Pailos is clearly aware of and willing to confront: ‘Beginning this anthology with the Enlightenment does not mean an uncritical endorsement of the intellectual tradition that ensued from it’. In an age of widespread historiographical reckoning, how do we disentangle the knotted roots of our collective and often deeply troubled pasts so that we might enable more hopeful futures? Is it sufficient to assemble a body of works that reflects ‘the very European-American cultural points of view that have historically structured the discipline in the United States’ so as to appeal to a target audience made up of its members or is it possible to challenge that audience while simultaneously appealing to new audiences by reframing the discipline, offering new perspectives on its pasts, present, and possible futures? These are inescapable and existential questions for all of us trying to teach in a planetary age and Otero-Pailos’ inspiring work is among those leading the way in offering meaningful responses.

Making no claim to comprehensiveness or expertise ‘in Asia, Africa, the Arab world, or among First Nations,’ the book confers this task on future scholars. Racism and genocide, as Otero-Pailos points out, have been obstinate, debilitating, and erasing factors that have constrained and obscured our understanding of the past globally. But the question remains – how do we redress this in the present and for the future? What does redressing historiographical inequity look like? Of the nearly one hundred entries in this anthology, those representing the experiences or perspectives of those outside Europe or North America can be counted on one hand. Even with rare examples by non-white authors like Ridge and Liang, their inclusion is largely owed to their ability to speak to white men rather than a demonstration of white man’s desire to speak to or learn from them. As is common with histories of disciplines with inherently white European roots, historiographical inequity casts a long shadow racially, geographically, and in other ways too. Gender is a notable example. By this measure, the paucity of entries by women – 7.5 of 96 – feels telling.

In an age of planetary pedagogies (and crisis), the demands on educators and educational institutions to include more voices, to be accessible to more diverse audiences, and to challenge the institutional and disciplinary structures we have inherited are growing exponentially. This requires deeper and more critical international collaborations in the 21st century and beyond, wherein the challenges are fundamentally different and greater than those in the 20th century and before. Time is running out. Disciplinary foundations and functions need to be urgently recast rather than reinforced.

An example from the heritage field is the global collaborative, MoHoA (Modern Heritage of Africa / Modern Heritage in the Anthropocene), established in 2020 with the aim of contributing to reframing and decentring the theory and practice of modern heritage in a planetary age.Footnote 1 Acknowledging that modern heritage – inextricably bound as it is to Western notions of progress, modernisation, and modernity – uniquely and disproportionately privileges western, invariably white, experiences and values, MoHoA joins the wider global effort to decolonise institutional practices that engage with the research, collection, valorisation, or transformation of material culture associated with our collective recent past. An important outcome of this collective and restitutive endeavour is The Cape Town Document on Modern Heritage, an equitable and decentring policy proposal presented in 2023 to UNESCO and its advisory bodies (MoHoA 2024) – vestiges of what Otero-Pailos refers to as the ‘post war consensus of a Eurocentric world view of historic preservation’.

Recasting our disciplinary foundations and functions is especially pertinent to historic preservation, which should be positioning itself not as it has done historically as peripheral to the built environment professions, but radically and assertively at the centre. With the construction industry accounting for 40% of global CO2 emissions (not to mention the myriad other metrics associated with extraction, transportation, and construction), our survival will literally depend on preserving, conserving, and adapting what we have already built rather than building anew. This aligns with what Otero-Pailos calls an ethic of care. Our schools of architecture and the discipline they serve, and indeed our species, will depend on us centring the principles and practices of a fundamentally reconstituted form of restoration. Unlike at any other time in human history, the greatest challenge for architects and architecture will be working with what already exists; a practice antithetical to the tabula rasa dependence of starchitecture and late-capitalist individualism of recent yore yet demanding far greater intelligence, creativity, and ingenuity. Writings that speak to this future imperative would have made a welcome contribution but feel conspicuous by their absence.

On the penultimate page of this volume, perhaps too easily overlooked, is a brilliant feature that goes some way to addressing and redressing any imbalances in the printed version. A QR code takes readers to a world map peppered with hyperlinked pins directing them to further readings and other related media. Simple, but effective, this function joins similar digital platforms using technology to radically decentre global knowledges associated with built environment histories, theories, pedagogies, and practices. Otero-Pailos and his collaborators have produced an exceptional gift to students, teachers, and practitioners with this anthology. By inviting future generations of scholars to develop this work is a call to arms for those, to paraphrase Otero-Pailos, embarking on their own exciting journey within historic preservation. They could not have a better point of departure.

Not applicable.

  1. www.mohoa.org.

  • Campbell-Stephens, R. M. 2021. Educational leadership and the global majority: decolonising narratives. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan.

  • MoHoA Participants. 2024. The Cape Town Document on Modern Heritage (2022). Curator: The Museum Journal 67 (1): 35–42.

    Article Google Scholar

Download references

Not applicable.

Not applicable.

Authors and Affiliations

  1. The Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL, 22 Gordon Street, WC1H 0QB, London, UK

    Edward Denison

Authors
  1. Edward DenisonView author publications

    You can also search for this author in PubMed Google Scholar

Contributions

The author read and approved the final manuscript.

Corresponding author

Correspondence to Edward Denison.

Competing interests

The author declare that he has no competing interests.

Publisher’s Note

Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article's Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article's Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.

Reprints and permissions

Abstract Image

Cite this article

Denison, E. Historic preservation theory: an anthology—readings from the 18th to the 21st Century, edited by Jorge Otero-Pailos. Design books, 2022. 608pp. ISBN9780578547145. Built Heritage 8, 17 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1186/s43238-024-00130-7

Download citation

  • Received:

  • Accepted:

  • Published:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s43238-024-00130-7

Share this article

Anyone you share the following link with will be able to read this content:

Sorry, a shareable link is not currently available for this article.

Provided by the Springer Nature SharedIt content-sharing initiative

历史保护理论:18 世纪至 21 世纪读本选集》,Jorge Otero-Pailos 编辑。设计书籍,2022 年。608pp.国际标准书号9780578547145
在地球教育学(和危机)时代,对教育工作者和教育机构的要求急剧增加,要求他们吸纳更多的声音,面向更多不同的受众,挑战我们继承下来的机构和学科结构。这就要求在 21 世纪及以后开展更深入、更具批判性的国际合作,因为与 20 世纪及以前相比,21 世纪及以后所面临的挑战有着根本的不同和更大。时不我待。遗产领域的一个例子是 2020 年成立的全球合作组织 MoHoA(非洲现代遗产/人类世现代遗产),其宗旨是促进重构和分散地球时代现代遗产的理论和实践。脚注 1 认识到现代遗产--与西方的进步、现代化和现代性概念密不可分--独特地、不成比例地赋予西方、无一例外是白人的经验和价值观以特权,非洲现代遗产部加入了更广泛的全球努力,对从事研究、收集、估价或改造与我们的集体近代史相关的物质文化的机构实践进行非殖民化。开普敦现代遗产文件》是这一集体修复努力的一项重要成果,它是 2023 年提交给联合国教科文组织及其咨询机构的一项公平和去殖民化的政策建议(世界遗产博物馆 2024 年)--奥特罗-派洛斯称之为 "战后欧洲中心主义历史保护世界观的共识 "的残余。重塑我们的学科基础和职能对历史保护尤为重要,历史保护不应像历史上那样将自己定位为建筑环境专业的边缘,而应坚定地将自己置于中心位置。由于建筑业占全球二氧化碳排放量的 40%(更不用说与开采、运输和建筑相关的无数其他指标),我们的生存实际上将取决于保护、保存和调整我们已经建造的东西,而不是重新建造。这与奥特罗-派洛斯(Otero-Pailos)所说的 "关怀伦理 "不谋而合。我们的建筑学院和它们所服务的学科,乃至我们的人类,都将取决于我们以一种从根本上重建的修复形式的原则和实践为中心。与人类历史上任何其他时期不同的是,建筑师和建筑学面临的最大挑战将是如何利用已有的东西开展工作;这一实践与近代以来建筑学和晚期资本主义个人主义的 "白板"(tabula rasa)依赖性背道而驰,但却需要更高的智慧、创造力和独创性。在这本书的倒数第二页,有一个很好的功能,可以在一定程度上解决和纠正印刷版本中存在的不平衡,这也许太容易被忽视了。一个二维码将读者带入一幅世界地图,地图上布满了超链接图钉,引导读者进一步阅读和浏览其他相关媒体。这一功能简单而有效,它与类似的数字平台一样,利用技术从根本上分散了与建筑环境历史、理论、教学和实践相关的全球知识。奥特罗-派洛斯和他的合作者通过这本选集为学生、教师和从业人员提供了一份特殊的礼物。用奥特罗-派洛斯的话说,邀请后代学者来编写这部作品,是对那些在历史保护领域开始自己激动人心的旅程的人的一种召唤。他们的出发点再好不过了。不适用。www.mohoa.org.Campbell-Stephens, R. M. 2021.Education leadership and the global majority: decolonising narratives.Cham:Palgrave Macmillan.MoHoA Participants.2024.The Cape Town Document on Modern Heritage (2022).馆长:博物馆杂志 67 (1):35-42.Article Google Scholar Download referencesNot applicable.Not applicable.Authors and AffiliationsThe Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL, 22 Gordon Street, WC1H 0QB, London, UKEdward DenisonAuthorsEdward DenisonView author publications您也可以在PubMed Google Scholar中搜索该作者Contributions作者阅读并批准了最终手稿。通讯作者通讯作者:Edward Denison.利益冲突作者声明他没有利益冲突.出版商注释Springer Nature对出版地图中的管辖权主张和机构隶属关系保持中立.开放获取本文采用知识共享署名 4.0(Creative Commons Attribution 4.0)许可协议进行许可。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
求助全文
约1分钟内获得全文 求助全文
来源期刊
Built Heritage
Built Heritage Arts and Humanities-History
CiteScore
2.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
29
审稿时长
12 weeks
×
引用
GB/T 7714-2015
复制
MLA
复制
APA
复制
导出至
BibTeX EndNote RefMan NoteFirst NoteExpress
×
提示
您的信息不完整,为了账户安全,请先补充。
现在去补充
×
提示
您因"违规操作"
具体请查看互助需知
我知道了
×
提示
确定
请完成安全验证×
copy
已复制链接
快去分享给好友吧!
我知道了
右上角分享
点击右上角分享
0
联系我们:info@booksci.cn Book学术提供免费学术资源搜索服务,方便国内外学者检索中英文文献。致力于提供最便捷和优质的服务体验。 Copyright © 2023 布克学术 All rights reserved.
京ICP备2023020795号-1
ghs 京公网安备 11010802042870号
Book学术文献互助
Book学术文献互助群
群 号:481959085
Book学术官方微信