CfP: Narratives of Disease, Discomfort, Development, and Disaster: Reconsidering (sub)Tropical Architecture and Urbanism
A stream on the historiography of tropical and subtropical
architecture to be presented at Urban Tropicality: the 7th
International Network of Tropical Architecture Conference, December 5-8
2019, Brisbane Australia.
Stream convened by Dr Deborah
van der Plaat (The University of Queensland), Dr Vandana Baweja
(University of Florida) and Professor Tom Avermaete (ETH Zurich).
Hurricanes
Irma and Maria (2017) have demonstrated the urgent need for
architecture in the tropics to be resilient to tropical cyclones,
storms, sea surges and floods. Yet, in architectural historiography,
tropical architecture has been viewed as a colonial construct acting in
response to disease and discomfort – factors that needed to be
conquered, overcome, and tackled. For example: in Triumph in the
Tropics: An Historical Sketch of Queensland (1959), the Australian
medical practitioner Raphael Cilento (1893–1985) linked the advancement
of tropical Australia to the conquest of disease and attainment of
comfort by the European settler, both realized through domestic design
and urban planning. Despite a long history and frequent occurrence of
flood, tropical storms, and cyclones – causal attributes long identified
in colonial discourses as limiting the development potential of
tropical regions—floods and hurricanes have begun to dominate tropical
architectural discourses only recently. The correlation between
anthropogenic climate change and the increasing intensity of hurricanes
and sea level rise has led to the dominance of the trope of disaster in
contemporary tropical architectural discourses. In addition, as it
became apparent that buildings, as one of the key consumers of fossil
fuels contribute significantly to climate change; the relationship
between architecture and climate has gone through a paradigmatic
shift—from one in which climate was a determinant of architectural
metrics, to one in which architecture is seen as an active agent in the
transformation of global climatic systems. As a consequence, tropical
architecture, which began as discourse founded on the relationship
between architecture and climate to ensure the well-being of the human
body in a localised context, is now seen as a discourse where the
production and operation of architecture have global planetary impact.
The
idea of tropical and subtropical architecture and urbanism initially
developed through a particular connection between discourses on disease,
spatial practices and optimum architectural typologies, which were
believed to circumvent the spread of tropical diseases and to maintain
the comfort of the white settler. After the Second World War, the focus
shifted from the European settlement of the colonial tropics to the
self-development and governance of the world’s tropical regions; a
phenomenon necessitated and propelled by post-war decolonization and
global regimes of development aid. Accompanying this change was a shift
away from the physiological comfort of the colonial settler to a new
focus on indigenous cultures, vernacular building traditions, use of
local materials, and increasing appreciation for the psychological value
of cultural conventions, including superstition and taboo.
The
aim of this stream is to examine how “triumph” in the tropics was
imagined across multiple geographies, by various subjects, through
diverse discourses, and at different times and to critically investigate
the roles architecture and urban planning played in this process. How
are particular attributes of the (sub) tropics – climatic,
environmental, social, ideological, spatial, and developmental –
constructed through the discipline of architectural history? What role
has architecture played in the imagination of tropicality through
acclimatization, hygiene, comfort, development, and resilience; and how
was this represented? How has architecture’s role in the imagination of
the tropics shifted over time as political regimes transformed from
colonization-settlement to decolonization-development debates? Is there a
core set of ideas or values that constitute the imagination of the
built environment in the tropics? How do these compare to indigenous
understandings? What is the relation between the imaginaries of
tropical architectures and cities by colonizers and colonized, or by
transnational development experts and the receivers of this aid?
We
particularly welcome papers that offer historical case studies of
tropical and subtropical architecture and urbanism examined through one
of four lenses: disease, discomfort, development or disaster. Case
studies or papers may consider (but are not restricted to) the following
topics.
Disease: In
colonial hygiene and medical discourses a causal relationship was
established between the tropical climate and disease. This was based on a
pathologisation of the tropics based on the assumption that diseases
were caused by putrefaction and fermentation, which in turn were caused
by tropical climatic conditions. From its inception, tropical
architecture was globalised as a set of spatial practices in the
tropical world through treatises on tropical medicine and hygiene
manuals. Spatial prescriptions for buildings, street layouts, and type
designs in the colonies were transformed with developments in medicine
and hygiene. In the late-nineteenth and early twentieth centuries,
theories of Helminthology, Bacteriology, and Parasitology clarified how
diseases were transmitted through vectors.
How
did the rapidly changing discourses of tropical medicine – from miasma
to germ theory – change architecture? When, why and how did disease
feature so strongly in the colonial discourses on the tropics and
subtropics. What anxieties, ideologies and/or climatic theories informed
this debate? What technical, spatial and urban strategies were
developed to mitigate the transmission of tropical diseases? How did the
colonized communities respond to the architectural and urban discourses
that developed as a consequence of tropical medicine and hygiene? Who
were the key writers, disciplines or organisations that shaped this
debate and what consequences did this have for local and/or colonial
communities?
Discomfort: Diseases
and discomfort were competing factors in the design of tropical
architecture from its inception. As the transmission of tropical
diseases was better understood, the discourse on the body in tropical
architecture shifted from environmental health concerns around
contagious diseases to physiological comfort and productivity. This
stream will examine how comfort became a dominant category in the
discourses on tropical and subtropical architecture and urbanism. How
was tropical or subtropical discomfort (or fatigue) defined, for whom,
and what spatial, material and technological strategies were developed
in buildings and cities to address this? What anxieties did tropical
discomfort address? How did race and gender enter discourses and
practices? What role did ornamentation and decoration play in the
mediation of tropical discomfort? Was the move from imperial colonialism
to settler colonialism significant and what impact did this have on the
climatic anxieties of settler communities. What was the role of the
physiological scientist and/or method on understandings of climate in
the early to mid-twentieth century and did this effect perceptions of
tropical and subtropical architecture? What governmental bodies
controlled these debates? Who were the key writers and/or adherents of
such ideas?
Development: Post-war
de-colonisations brought discourses of ‘development aid’, defined as
the economic, social and technical advancement of the world’s tropical
regions. Concerns for white discomfort were replaced with a new focus on
shelter, low-cost housing, self-help housing, vernacular building
technologies and materials, and the acknowledgement of local customs and
taboos. What consequences did decolonization and rapid modernization
have on architecture and urban design in these regions? How did
transnational organizations such as the United Nations in collaboration
with private and governmental organizations shape, support, and
facilitate a new developmentalist agenda? Who were the key actors,
theorists, writers and architects in this arena at the intersection of
tropical architecture and postwar development? How did the postwar
developmental paradigm break away from earlier paradigms of tropical
architecture?. What role was played by programmes in tropical
architecture such as the Department of Tropical Architecture at the
Architecture Association (London, 1955 –71) or the postgraduate studies
in Tropical architecture offered by Balwant Saini and Steven Szokolay at
the University of Queensland in the 1970s and 1980s.
Disaster: Despite
a long association of the “torrid zone” with natural disaster, and
particularly flood and tropical cyclone, the historiography on the
tropics and subtropics rarely documents architectural and urban
responses to such phenomena. While their influence and impact is hinted
at by structures such as the elevated house and the use of lightweight
building materials, it is only in recent years that extreme weather
events and rising sea levels have identified resilience as a priority
for these regions. We seek papers that document architectural and
planning responses, past and present, to tropical storms and flood.
Papers may examine specific events (Typhoon Wanda, Hong Kong, 1962;
Cyclone Tracey, Darwin 1974; or Hurricane Maria, Puerto Rico, 2017) and
their impact on the built environment and cultural heritage of their
regions; the historical role of regulation, building codes and zoning
and their material impact or consequences; historical discussions or
debates on tropical resilience; and attempts, both past and present, to
develop new and more resilient models of housing and infrastructure in
the world’s tropics and subtropics. The recent promotion of tropical and
subtropical architects by governmental programs (i.e. the HEAT program
sponsored by the Queensland State Government) to face global challenges
such as climate change offers an alternate focus.
Narratives
of Disease, Discomfort, Development and Disaster: Reconsidering
(sub)Tropical Architecture and Urbanism, is a stream of the 2019 iNTA
Conference and will run over 2 days. The
stream will consist of panels of three to four papers of twenty minutes
each, with four to five panels per day. Authors will be invited to
publish their papers as an edited book to be published in 2020. Authors
who submit papers and are accepted are expected to attend and present at
the conference.
Submission Information & Instructions
Submit abstracts of no more than 300 words in length by email as Word documents to: https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=inta2019.
Please name the email subject ABSTRACT-SURNAME and use this name for
your submission file as well. Please nominate which stream you would
like your paper to be considered under.
April 26, 2019: Abstracts due
May 17, 2019: Notification of Acceptance & feedback on abstract
July 26, 2019: Paper Submission 1
October 18, 2019: Paper submission 2
Dec 6, 2019: INTA conference and presentation of papers (Brisbane): feedback from conveners.
Additional details on paper submissions will be provided with notification of acceptance.
For further information please contact: d.vanderplaat@uq.edu.au, vbaweja@ufl.edu, or tom.avermaete@gta.arch.ethz.ch