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Gandhi and Architecture - A Time for Low-Cost Housing (Paperback)
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Gandhi and Architecture - A Time for Low-Cost Housing (Paperback)
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Gandhi and Architecture: A Time for Low-Cost Housing chronicles the
emergence of a low-cost, low-rise housing architecture that
conforms to M.K. Gandhi’s religious need to establish finite
boundaries for everyday actions; finitude in turn defines
Gandhi’s conservative and exclusionary conception of religion.
Drawing from rich archival and field materials, the book begins
with an exploration of Gandhi’s religiosity of relinquishment and
the British Spiritualist, Madeline Slade’s creation of his
low-cost hut, Adi Niwas, in the village of Segaon in the 1930s. Adi
Niwas inaugurates a low-cost housing architecture of finitude
founded on the near-simultaneous but heterogeneous, conservative
Gandhian ideals of pursuing self-sacrifice and rendering the
pursuit of self-sacrifice legible as the practice of an
exclusionary varnashramadharma. At a considerable remove from
Gandhi’s religious conservatism, successive generations in
post-colonial India have reimagined a secular necessity for this
Gandhian low-cost housing architecture of finitude. In the early
1950s era of mass housing for post-partition refugees from
Pakistan, the making of a low-cost housing architecture was
premised on the necessity of responding to economic concerns and to
an emerging demographic mandate. In the 1970s, during the
Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries crisis, it was
premised on the rise of urban and climatological necessities. More
recently, in the late 1990s and early 2000s, its reception has been
premised on the emergence of language-based identitarianism in
Wardha, Maharashtra. Each of these moments of necessity reveals the
enduring present of a Gandhian low-cost housing architecture of
finitude and also the need to emancipate Gandhian finitude from
Gandhi’s own exclusions. This volume is a critical intervention
in the philosophy of architectural history. Drawing eclectically
from science and technology studies, political science, housing
studies, urban studies, religious studies, and anthropology, this
richly illustrated volume will be of great interest to students and
researchers of architecture and design, housing, history,
sociology, economics, Gandhian studies, urban studies and
development studies.
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