Architecture and the Canadian Fabric

Edited by Rhodri Windsor Liscombe
Categories: Canadian History, Architecture, Art
Publisher: UBC Press
Hardcover : 9780774819398, 536 pages, September 2011
Paperback : 9780774819404, 536 pages, October 2012

Table of contents

Introduction: Writing into Canadian Architectural History / Rhodri Windsor Liscombe

Part 1: Architectural Culture in French Canada and Before

1 First Impressions: How French Jesuits Framed Canada / Judi Loach

2 Visibility, Symbolic Landscape, and Power: Jean-Baptiste-Louis Franquelin’s View of Quebec City in 1688 / Marc Grignon

Part 2: Upper Canadian Architecture

3 The Expansion of Religious Institution and Ontario’s Economy, 1849-74: A Case Study of the Construction of Toronto’s St. James Cathedral / Barry Magrill

4 “For the benefit of the inhabitants”: The Urban Market and City Planning in Toronto / Sharon Vattay

Part 3: Building the Confederation

5 Shifting Soil: Agency and Building Type in Narratives of Canada’s “First” Parliament / Christopher Thomas

6 Stitching Vancouver’s New Clothes: The World Building, Confederation, and the Making of Place / Geoffrey Carr

7 Digging in the Gardens: Unearthing the Experience of Modernity in Interwar Toronto / Michael Windover

Part 4: Reconstructing Canada

8 A Modern Heritage House of Memories: The Quebec Bungalow / Lucie K. Morisset

9 Place with No Dawn: A Town’s Evolution and Erskine’s Arctic Utopia / Alan Marcus

Part 5: Styling Modern Nationhood

10 The Idea of Brutalism in Canadian Architecture / Réjean Legault

11 Nation, City, Place: Rethinking Nationalism at the Canadian Museum of Civilization / Laura Hourston Hanks

Part 6: Fabricating Canadian Spaces in the Late/Postmodern Era

12 From Earth City to Global Village: McLuhan, Media, and the Cosmopolis / Richard Cavell

13 Big-Box Land: New Retail Format Architecture and Consumption in Canada / Justin McGrail

14 Archi-tizing: Architecture, Advertising, and the Commodification of Urban Community / Rhodri Windsor Liscombe

Part 7: Identities of Canadian Architecture

15 “Canada's Greatest Architect” / Nicholas Olsberg

16 A Question of Identity / Michael McMordie

17 Memory, the Architecture of First Nations, and the Problem with History / Daniel M. Millette

Conclusion: Future Writing on Canadian Architectural History / Rhodri Windsor Liscombe

Index

A richly textured anthology that weaves architecture and its history into the fabric of Canada identity and nation building.

Description

Architecture plays a powerful role in nation building. Buildings and monuments not only constitute the built fabric of society, they reflect the intersection of culture, politics, economics, and aesthetics in distinct social settings and distinct times. From first contact to the postmodern city, this anthology traces the interaction between culture and politics as reflected in Canadian architecture and the infrastructure of ordinary life. Whether focusing on the construction of Parliament or exploring the ideas of Marshall McLuhan and Arthur Erickson, these highly original essays move beyond considerations of authorship and style to address cultural politics and insights from race and gender studies and from postcolonial and spatial theory.

Reviews

The essays greatly advance the field of architectural history in Canada. Given the breadth on display, Canadian architects and historians surely will find items of interest and pertinence to their practice.

- David Monteyne, Faculty of Environmental Design, University of Calgary

According to the editor’s conclusion, this study should “reinforce attention to Canadian architectural patrimony and demonstrate its significance for the international discourse and practice of design”. This work does succeed in doing so and also adds significantly to the body of literature on Canadian architecture. It is well researched and thoroughly documented. The analytical principles guiding the publication could be applied to other works, including further studies by this group of authors, covering more aspects of the architectural heritage of Canada.

- Barbara Opar, Architecture Librarian, Syracuse University Library

Broad in scope and filled with both insight and intriguing fact…this collection serves to entice a more sustained consideration of the relation between the messy realities of social practice and the production of this thing called architecture.

- Christopher Macdonald, University of British Columbia