Whose Europe? On the construction of symbols, architectural and immaterial, and the post-national condition

Publikation: Beitrag in Buch/Bericht/Sammelwerk/KonferenzbandBeitrag in Buch/SammelwerkTransfer

Autorschaft

  • Benedikt Stoll
  • Paolo Patelli

Organisationseinheiten

Forschungs-netzwerk anzeigen

Details

Titel in ÜbersetzungWessen Europa?: Über die Konstuktion von Symbolen - architektonisch und immateriell - und deren post-nationale Beschaffenheit
OriginalspracheEnglisch
Titel des SammelwerksThresholds
UntertitelA field guide to navigating the future of architecture
ISBN (elektronisch)978-84-947523-3-9
PublikationsstatusVeröffentlicht - 2017

Publikationsreihe

NameArchifutures
Herausgeber (Verlag)dpr-Barcelona

Abstract

The term “postnationalism” describes a world in which nation states – and their associated national identities – have ceased to be the primary framework from which governance and citizenship is derived. With nationalism on the rise and the principle of unity seemingly in retreat in Europe and beyond, such a condition currently seems very far away for the countries of the European Union. But six-decades’ worth of constructions pertaining to it remain: from banknotes to buildings, logos to plazas – all attempt to foster a pan-European identity of sorts, whilst asserting the Union’s position on the global stage.

Zitieren

Whose Europe? On the construction of symbols, architectural and immaterial, and the post-national condition. / Stoll, Benedikt; Patelli, Paolo .
Thresholds : A field guide to navigating the future of architecture. 2017. (Archifutures).

Publikation: Beitrag in Buch/Bericht/Sammelwerk/KonferenzbandBeitrag in Buch/SammelwerkTransfer

Stoll, B & Patelli, P 2017, Whose Europe? On the construction of symbols, architectural and immaterial, and the post-national condition. in Thresholds : A field guide to navigating the future of architecture. Archifutures.
Stoll, B., & Patelli, P. (2017). Whose Europe? On the construction of symbols, architectural and immaterial, and the post-national condition. In Thresholds : A field guide to navigating the future of architecture (Archifutures).
Stoll B, Patelli P. Whose Europe? On the construction of symbols, architectural and immaterial, and the post-national condition. in Thresholds : A field guide to navigating the future of architecture. 2017. (Archifutures).
Stoll, Benedikt ; Patelli, Paolo . / Whose Europe? On the construction of symbols, architectural and immaterial, and the post-national condition. Thresholds : A field guide to navigating the future of architecture. 2017. (Archifutures).
Download
@inbook{0555c9c85f1b4179bd23f0dab81169a7,
title = "Whose Europe?: On the construction of symbols, architectural and immaterial, and the post-national condition",
abstract = "The term “postnationalism” describes a world in which nation states – and their associated national identities – have ceased to be the primary framework from which governance and citizenship is derived. With nationalism on the rise and the principle of unity seemingly in retreat in Europe and beyond, such a condition currently seems very far away for the countries of the European Union. But six-decades{\textquoteright} worth of constructions pertaining to it remain: from banknotes to buildings, logos to plazas – all attempt to foster a pan-European identity of sorts, whilst asserting the Union{\textquoteright}s position on the global stage.",
author = "Benedikt Stoll and Paolo Patelli",
year = "2017",
language = "English",
series = "Archifutures",
publisher = "dpr-Barcelona",
booktitle = "Thresholds",

}

Download

TY - CHAP

T1 - Whose Europe?

T2 - On the construction of symbols, architectural and immaterial, and the post-national condition

AU - Stoll, Benedikt

AU - Patelli, Paolo

PY - 2017

Y1 - 2017

N2 - The term “postnationalism” describes a world in which nation states – and their associated national identities – have ceased to be the primary framework from which governance and citizenship is derived. With nationalism on the rise and the principle of unity seemingly in retreat in Europe and beyond, such a condition currently seems very far away for the countries of the European Union. But six-decades’ worth of constructions pertaining to it remain: from banknotes to buildings, logos to plazas – all attempt to foster a pan-European identity of sorts, whilst asserting the Union’s position on the global stage.

AB - The term “postnationalism” describes a world in which nation states – and their associated national identities – have ceased to be the primary framework from which governance and citizenship is derived. With nationalism on the rise and the principle of unity seemingly in retreat in Europe and beyond, such a condition currently seems very far away for the countries of the European Union. But six-decades’ worth of constructions pertaining to it remain: from banknotes to buildings, logos to plazas – all attempt to foster a pan-European identity of sorts, whilst asserting the Union’s position on the global stage.

M3 - Contribution to book/anthology

T3 - Archifutures

BT - Thresholds

ER -