Landscapes of care: photography, film, modern architecture and landscape heritage
Research output: Book/Report › Anthology › Research › peer-review
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Landscapes of care: photography, film, modern architecture and landscape heritage. / Campbell, Hugh (Editor); Durden, Mark (Editor); Ferreira, Teresa (Editor); Leal, João (Editor); Munck Petersen, Rikke (Editor); Troiani, igea (Editor).
Porto : University of Porto, 2023. 236 p. (Sophia Journal; No. 1, Vol. 8).Research output: Book/Report › Anthology › Research › peer-review
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TY - BOOK
T1 - Landscapes of care: photography, film, modern architecture and landscape heritage
A2 - Campbell, Hugh
A2 - Durden, Mark
A2 - Ferreira, Teresa
A2 - Leal, João
A2 - Munck Petersen, Rikke
A2 - Troiani, igea
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - Sophia’s third cycle main theme is “Landscapes of Care” with an overall interest around contemporary photography on how architecture can help a broken planet. It intends to understand how the photographic/imagery universe can be explored as a meaningful instrument of research about the multifaceted complex socioeconomic, political, historical, technical and ecological dimensions of architecture, city and territory that testify, question or emerge from relationships of care.The concept “landscapes of care” has increasingly been adopted by diverse areas of study coming from health geography to the arts and architecture. Taking this notion to the universe of architecture we would like to understand architecture, city and territory as living and inclusive organisms, constituted by multifaceted landscapes with complex social and organisational spatialities which embody the difference and the other, the strange, the unfamiliar, the indigenous, the human and the non-human.Sophia Journal Vol. 8 No. 1 (2023): Landscapes of care: photography, film, modern architecture and landscape heritage addresses contemporary photographic and visual practices that focus on how architecture understood in a wide sense can help to heal a broken planet. The concept of “Landscapes of Care” has increasingly been adopted by diverse areas of study, from health geography to the arts, architecture and heritage preservation. It is used here in order to understand and document modern architecture, building, city and territory as living and inclusive organisms, as well as heritage resources for global sustainability. Modern architecture is a ‘heritage at risk’ as it belongs to a recent past that has not yet been sufficiently recognised by the authorities, scholars and general public. Our aim is to explore the ways in which photography and film can be used as meaningful instruments of research into the socioeconomic, political, historical, technical and ecological dimensions of modern architecture, city and territory.
AB - Sophia’s third cycle main theme is “Landscapes of Care” with an overall interest around contemporary photography on how architecture can help a broken planet. It intends to understand how the photographic/imagery universe can be explored as a meaningful instrument of research about the multifaceted complex socioeconomic, political, historical, technical and ecological dimensions of architecture, city and territory that testify, question or emerge from relationships of care.The concept “landscapes of care” has increasingly been adopted by diverse areas of study coming from health geography to the arts and architecture. Taking this notion to the universe of architecture we would like to understand architecture, city and territory as living and inclusive organisms, constituted by multifaceted landscapes with complex social and organisational spatialities which embody the difference and the other, the strange, the unfamiliar, the indigenous, the human and the non-human.Sophia Journal Vol. 8 No. 1 (2023): Landscapes of care: photography, film, modern architecture and landscape heritage addresses contemporary photographic and visual practices that focus on how architecture understood in a wide sense can help to heal a broken planet. The concept of “Landscapes of Care” has increasingly been adopted by diverse areas of study, from health geography to the arts, architecture and heritage preservation. It is used here in order to understand and document modern architecture, building, city and territory as living and inclusive organisms, as well as heritage resources for global sustainability. Modern architecture is a ‘heritage at risk’ as it belongs to a recent past that has not yet been sufficiently recognised by the authorities, scholars and general public. Our aim is to explore the ways in which photography and film can be used as meaningful instruments of research into the socioeconomic, political, historical, technical and ecological dimensions of modern architecture, city and territory.
UR - https://www.up.pt/revistas/index.php/sophia/announcement/view/13
U2 - 10.24840/2183-8976_2023-0008_0001
DO - 10.24840/2183-8976_2023-0008_0001
M3 - Anthology
T3 - Sophia Journal
BT - Landscapes of care: photography, film, modern architecture and landscape heritage
PB - University of Porto
CY - Porto
ER -
ID: 320117607