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The Social Project - Housing Postwar France (Paperback)
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The Social Project - Housing Postwar France (Paperback)
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Winner of the 2015 Abbott Lowell Cummings prize from the Vernacular
Architecture Forum Winner of the 2015 Sprio Kostof Book Award from
the Society of Architectural Historians Winner of the 2016
International Planning History Society Book Prize for European
Planning History Honorable Mention: 2016 Wylie Prize in French
Studies In the three decades following World War II, the French
government engaged in one of the twentieth century's greatest
social and architectural experiments: transforming a mostly rural
country into a modernized urban nation. Through the
state-sanctioned construction of mass housing and development of
towns on the outskirts of existing cities, a new world materialized
where sixty years ago little more than cabbage and cottages
existed. Known as the banlieue, the suburban landscapes that make
up much of contemporary France are near-opposites of the historic
cities they surround. Although these postwar environments of
towers, slabs, and megastructures are often seen as a single
utopian blueprint gone awry, Kenny Cupers demonstrates that their
construction was instead driven by the intense aspirations and
anxieties of a broad range of people. Narrating the complex
interactions between architects, planners, policy makers,
inhabitants, and social scientists, he shows how postwar dwelling
was caught between the purview of the welfare state and the rise of
mass consumerism. The Social Project unearths three decades of
architectural and social experiments centered on the dwelling
environment as it became an object of modernization, an everyday
site of citizen participation, and a domain of social scientific
expertise. Beyond state intervention, it was this new regime of
knowledge production that made postwar modernism mainstream. The
first comprehensive history of these wide-ranging urban projects,
this book reveals how housing in postwar France shaped both
contemporary urbanity and modern architecture.
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