Metropolitan Indigenous Cultural Centres have become a focal
point for making Indigenous histories and contemporary cultures
public in settler-colonial societies over the past three decades.
While there are extraordinary success stories, there are equally
stories that cause concern: award-winning architecturally designed
Indigenous cultural centres that have been abandoned; centres that
serve the interests of tourists but fail to nourish the cultural
interests of Indigenous stakeholders; and places for vibrant
community gathering that fail to garner the economic and politic
support to remain viable. Indigenous cultural centres are rarely
static. They are places of emergence, assembled and re-assembled
along a range of vectors that usually lie beyond the gaze of
architecture. How might the traditional concerns of architecture
site, space, form, function, materialities, tectonics be
reconfigured to express the complex and varied social identities of
contemporary Indigenous peoples in colonised nations?
This book, documents a range of Indigenous Cultural Centres
across the globe and the processes that led to their development.
It explores the possibilities for the social and political project
of the Cultural Centre that architecture both inhibits and affords.
Whose idea of architecture counts when designing Indigenous
Cultural Centres? How does architectural history and contemporary
practice territorialise spaces of Indigenous occupation? What is
architecture for Indigenous cultures and how is it recognised?
This ambitious and provocative study pursues a new architecture
for colonised Indigenous cultures that takes the politics of
recognition to its heart. It advocates an ethics of mutual
engagement as a crucial condition for architectural projects that
design across cultural difference. The book s structure, method,
and arguments are dialogically assembled around narratives told by
Indigenous people of their pursuit of public recognition, spatial
justice, and architectural presence in settler dominated societies.
Possibilities for decolonising architecture emerge through these
accounts. "
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