Writing in the Margins: Speaking of (Hi)stories in Australia and New Zealand

IF 0.2 0 ARCHITECTURE
Macarena de la Vega de León
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

ABSTRACT The use of oral history as a method to rewrite the history of modern architecture has intensified in recent years. This essay presents initial reflections of a research project on oral histories of architectural history, not architecture, through interviews with historians of architecture based in Australia and New Zealand, not architects. Acknowledging the contribution of users and clients in constructing new narratives of architecture, I argue that there is also value in recording the stories told by historians of architecture. Their firsthand experiences provide insight into the process of overcoming the geographical remoteness of the discipline in the region, with its intellectual uneasiness and institutional uncertainty. Globally, there are lessons to be learned by emerging scholars from the impact of migration and networks on their career progression. This essay aims to test the value and validity of the oral histories of historians of architecture, to not only better contextualise their own work, but also advance the discipline of the history of architecture through the telling of and listening to their stories. It aims to explore whether the principles and strengths, as well as the shortcomings, of oral history as a methodology in architectural research can be productive in its historiography.
边缘地带的写作:澳大利亚和新西兰的(嗨)故事
近年来,口述历史作为改写现代建筑史的一种方法得到了加强。本文通过对澳大利亚和新西兰建筑历史学家而非建筑师的采访,对一个关于建筑史而非建筑口述史的研究项目进行了初步思考。承认用户和客户在构建新的建筑叙事方面的贡献,我认为记录建筑历史学家讲述的故事也有价值。他们的第一手经验让我们深入了解了克服该地区学科地理位置偏远、智力不安和制度不确定性的过程。在全球范围内,新兴学者可以从移民和网络对其职业发展的影响中吸取教训。本文旨在检验建筑历史学家口述历史的价值和有效性,不仅能更好地将他们自己的作品背景化,而且能通过讲述和倾听他们的故事来推进建筑史学科。它旨在探索口述历史作为建筑研究方法论的原则、优点和缺点是否能在其史学中产生成效。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.50
自引率
25.00%
发文量
26
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