最初の産業国家における建築と文化ヘゲモニー <論説>

史学研究 Issue 181 Page 1-19 published_at 1988-09-30
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Title ( jpn )
最初の産業国家における建築と文化ヘゲモニー <論説>
Title ( eng )
The Architecture and Cultural Hegemony in the First Industrial Nation <Article>
Creator
Tohda Masahiro
Source Title
史学研究
The Review of the Study of History : Shigaku Kenkyu
Issue 181
Start Page 1
End Page 19
Journal Identifire
[PISSN] 0386-9342
[NCID] AN00100206
Abstract
Victorians created a new industrial world-the First Industrial Nation. But, at the same time, they were facinated with antiquarianism. The First Industrial Nation saw many buildings built with the architectural styles of the past, such as Greek and Gothic.
So, it is very important to clarify the meaning and function of the past in the modern industrial world. According to M. J. Wiener, the middle class acceptance of the Gothic style marked the beginning of a yielding by its new men to the cultural hegemony of the old aristocracy. On the other hand, C. Dellheim asserts that middle class businessmen appropriated Gothic style to create pedigree for their values and legitimize their quest for hegemoney. That is to say, he says that they engineered a cultural coup.
I can't agree with these interpretations. Examing the main sources, the articles in Westminster Review, Edinburgh Review, Quarterly Review and Blackwood's Magazine, I found that Victorians, recognizing the prestige of the past and the weakness of the cultural power to translate the industrial power into a distinct cultural expression, managed to reconcil "the new"-the modern industrial world and "the old"-the pre industrial, hierachical world. Within this framework of the reconciliation of "the new" with "the old", Victorians, using the architectural styles of the past, tryed to create the architecture which can satisfy "the modern needs".
NDC
General history of Europe [ 230 ]
Language
jpn
Resource Type departmental bulletin paper
Publisher
広島史学研究会
Date of Issued 1988-09-30
Publish Type Version of Record
Access Rights open access
Source Identifier
[ISSN] 0386-9342
[NCID] AN00100206