Architecture and Modern Literature: David Anton Spurr
Architecture and Modern Literature: David Anton Spurr
Architecture and Modern Literature: David Anton Spurr
How to live? This is the question that modern literature implicitly poses in
its interpretation of architectural form, in its testimony to the effects of
that form on human relations and the mind, and in its imagination of alternate kinds of constructed space. It is also the question that modern architecture has put to itself with increasing urgency, both in the form of architectural theory and in actual construction, as the realization of
architectural design. We witness in works of both literature and architecture an ongoing interrogation of the nature of the built environment as a
design for living. What is specically modern in this interrogation is the
notion that the built environment must be continually reinvented. Peter
Eisenman writes, What denes architecture is the continuous dislocation
of dwelling (Architecture 177). Eisenman is warning against the dangers
of the institutionalization of a certain way of living imposed by the way architecture occupies and organizes space. He is also speaking from within
the philosophical tradition that denes dwelling not as a state of rest or habituation but as perpetual construction: dwelling and building, according
to Heidegger, are bound within the same dynamic (Building 151). This is
also to think of architecture as an art form, like imaginative literature,
which must forever renew itself in order to retain its vitality. T. S. Eliot
makes a similar point about literature when he says that a work designed
to conform to existing standards would not really conform at all, for it
would not be new, and would therefore not be a work of art (Selected 39).
The nature of dwelling and its continuing redenition has been a preoc249
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cupation of the present work in its exploration of the various modes of relation between architecture and literature. Closely related to the question
of dwelling has been that of the modern worlds relation to the historical
past, particularly as manifested in the built environment. Finally, both of
these questions have been examined in the light of a third: that of modern
subjectivity, including the manner in which architecture is rendered, in literature, in terms of memory, invention, and desire. With these questions
in mind, let us cast one nal glance over the ground that has been covered.
In one of the lectures he gave at the National Gallery of Art in Washington in 1967, Mario Praz claimed that by the end of the eighteenth century architecture had lost its leading role in European culture. It could now
seek only to borrow ideas, like those of the beautiful and the sublime, that
were better expressed in philosophy and literature. Of William Beckfords
extravagant project of Gothic revival, Praz says, Fonthill Abbey tries to
translate the poetic emotion of sublimity into stone (153). This judgment
resonates with Manfredo Tafuris designation of the same historical moment as one of semantic crisis in architecture, as well as with Derridas
reading of architecture as a multiply layered text. However, this assimilation of the architectural to the textual has the effect of destabilizing two attributes traditionally regarded as essential to architecture: its organization
around a myth of origin, and its tie to a teleology of habitus (Psych 481).
Put simply, there came a moment when architecture lost its sense of where
it had come from, where it was going, and what it meant beyond its most
basic functions. It is a dening moment of modernity, and one that we
continue to inhabit.
The rst chapter of this work documents a number of ways in which
literary and philosophical works interpret this loss in terms of the human
experience of dwelling. Victorian writers like Ruskin and Dickens give expression to a traditional myth of dwelling only to prepare the ground for
this myth to be deconstructed. The high modernistsProust, Joyce, and
Woolfrecast the notion of dwelling as a continual process of displacement, while many of their formal procedures are analogous to contemporary developments in architectural modernism that also seek to redene
the notion of dwelling. The end of modernism marked by Becketts purity
of negation is contemporary with an architecture of nihilism that cultivates absence as a kind of clearing in the midst of modern world that is too
much with us. In general, what we witness in both literature and architecture is the search for a new sense of dwelling generated by the experience
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