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Designing Pan-America - U.S. Architectural Visions for the Western Hemisphere (Paperback)
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Designing Pan-America - U.S. Architectural Visions for the Western Hemisphere (Paperback)
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Coinciding with the centennial of the Pan American Union (now the
Organization of American States), Gonzalez explores how nineteenth-
and twentieth-century U.S. architects and their clients built a
visionary Pan-America to promote commerce and cultural exchange
between United States and Latin America. Late in the nineteenth
century, U.S. commercial and political interests began eyeing the
countries of Latin America as plantations, farms, and mines to be
accessed by new shipping lines and railroads. As their desire to
dominate commerce and trade in the Western Hemisphere grew, these
U.S. interests promoted the concept of "Pan-Americanism" to link
the United States and Latin America and called on U.S. architects
to help set the stage for Pan-Americanism's development. Through
international expositions, monuments, and institution building,
U.S. architects translated the concept of a united Pan-American
sensibility into architectural or built form. In the process, they
also constructed an artificial ideological identity-a fictional
Pan-America peopled with imaginary Pan-American citizens, the
hemispheric loyalists who would support these projects and who were
the presumed benefactors of this presumed architecture of
unification. Designing Pan-America presents the first examination
of the architectural expressions of Pan-Americanism. Concentrating
on U.S. architects and their clients, Robert Alexander Gonzalez
demonstrates how they proposed designs reflecting U.S. presumptions
and projections about the relationship between the United States
and Latin America. This forgotten chapter of American architecture
unfolds over the course of a number of international expositions,
ranging from the North, Central, and South American Exposition of
1885-1886 in New Orleans to Miami's unrealized Interama fair and
San Antonio's HemisFair '68 and encompassing the Pan American Union
headquarters building in Washington, D.C. and the creation of the
Columbus Memorial Lighthouse in the Dominican Republic.
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