Ruins and Slavic Utopia: Architecture of the Social Reform in Croatian Historic Towns, 1945- 1960 (CROSBI ID 60838)
Prilog u knjizi | izvorni znanstveni rad | međunarodna recenzija
Podaci o odgovornosti
Špikić, Marko
engleski
Ruins and Slavic Utopia: Architecture of the Social Reform in Croatian Historic Towns, 1945- 1960
Text deals with reconstruction projects conceived by the main protagonists of conservation and modernist movements of the post-world war II Croatia. Bearing in mind the triumph of Tito’s communists and the state of bombarded historic towns on Eastern Adriatic, text discusses the social, political and professional aspects in architectural conservation and urban planning of the period. In post-war reforms the strengthening of revolutionary collectivist model in Yugoslavia implied both the acts of selective anamnesis and creative prognosis in forging of new political identity. Until 1945 both modernist and conservation movements in Croatia depended on Central and West European traditions. In the new Slavic state, which tended to suppress contributions from Italian, Austrian and German cultures, seen as hegemonic or colonial, two movements had to face a reform of their own. Two models of treating damaged historic towns: nostalgic facsimile reconstructions and reformist new inventions on tabula rasa often estranged the conservators and modernist planners. Major conservators and planners of post-war Croatia (C. Fisković, H. Bilinić, M. Prelog, M. Stahuljak, G. Oštrić, J. Seissel, I. Vitić, N. Dobrović, B. Milić, N. Šegvić, A. Mohorovičić, J. and T. Marasović) had to comply with revolutionary political demands. They had to transform the theaters of war – emptied from its non-Slavic inhabitants – into theaters of normalized life of the communist Utopia, counting both on principles of subtraction and addition in reshaping of bombarded towns. Being a part of social reform, these transformations of the urban scenery were important instruments for the process of inventing the socialist citizen, whose knowledge of the past had to be reshaped by carefully planned corrections on the level of a plot, square, or townscape. Text discusses these changes in historic towns of Split, Šibenik, Zadar and Zagreb, based on concepts of the protagonists and bearing in mind sense of the past and political drive for change in the circles of conservators and urban planners.
post-war, ruins, architecture, conservation, Croatia, Zagreb, Šibenik, Split, Zadar
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Podaci o prilogu
145-159.
objavljeno
10.14361/9783839440940-011
Podaci o knjizi
Architektur und Akteure: Praxis und Oeffentlichkeit in der Nachkriegsgesellschaft
Hess, Regine
Bielefeld: Transcript
2018.
978-3-8376-4094-6