Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Gwendolyn Brooks and the Legacies of Architectural Modernity

View through CrossRef
This essay reads the work of poet, Gwendolyn Brooks, in terms of its critical engagement with the architectural modernity of her home city, Chicago. Taking her poetry from A Street in Bronzeville (1945) through to the 1968 collection, In the Mecca, as a primary focus, the essay traces the significance of Chicago style architecture on Brooks’ aesthetic. It was in Chicago that some of the first tall office buildings were designed; it was here that structural steel and glass were first used to distinctive architectural effect, and it was here, in 1893, that the World’s Columbian Exposition was held—an event that, for better or worse, was to shape American architecture well into the twentieth century. Brooks’ poetry is alert to this history, attuned to contemporary debates about urban design and sensitive to architectural experience and affect. This context informs and shapes her work in often unexpected ways. Her approach is often oblique (registered in metaphor, style, and voice) but nevertheless incisive in its rendering of the relationship between architecture, modernity and power.
Title: Gwendolyn Brooks and the Legacies of Architectural Modernity
Description:
This essay reads the work of poet, Gwendolyn Brooks, in terms of its critical engagement with the architectural modernity of her home city, Chicago.
Taking her poetry from A Street in Bronzeville (1945) through to the 1968 collection, In the Mecca, as a primary focus, the essay traces the significance of Chicago style architecture on Brooks’ aesthetic.
It was in Chicago that some of the first tall office buildings were designed; it was here that structural steel and glass were first used to distinctive architectural effect, and it was here, in 1893, that the World’s Columbian Exposition was held—an event that, for better or worse, was to shape American architecture well into the twentieth century.
Brooks’ poetry is alert to this history, attuned to contemporary debates about urban design and sensitive to architectural experience and affect.
This context informs and shapes her work in often unexpected ways.
Her approach is often oblique (registered in metaphor, style, and voice) but nevertheless incisive in its rendering of the relationship between architecture, modernity and power.

Related Results

Gwendolyn Brooks: Who Ya Talkin’ With?
Gwendolyn Brooks: Who Ya Talkin’ With?
Abstract This essay looks at the shifting poetic and aesthetic strategies that Gwendolyn Brooks employed over her more than fifty-year career. The first Black Americ...
Modernity: A Way of Urbanism -- Banaras in Indigenous Trans-Formations
Modernity: A Way of Urbanism -- Banaras in Indigenous Trans-Formations
Tradition of tomorrow is the modernity of today andToday’s tradition was the modernity of yesterday. Modernity, as a process and not as an output, is a derivative of transfor...
Cleanth Brooks
Cleanth Brooks
Cleanth Brooks (b. 1906–d. 1994), after T. S. Eliot and I. A. Richards, was arguably among the most influential modern literary critics. He is commonly identified as the representa...
The Pransky interview: Dr Rodney Brooks, Robotics Entrepreneur, Founder and CTO of Rethink Robotics
The Pransky interview: Dr Rodney Brooks, Robotics Entrepreneur, Founder and CTO of Rethink Robotics
Purpose – This article, a “Q&A interview” conducted by Joanne Pransky of Industrial Robot Journal, aims to impart the combined technological, business, and pers...
The Observatory
The Observatory
<p><b>This thesis investigation looks at how transformative heritage stories linked to abandoned architectural sites can be reawakened through an allegorical architectu...
Legitimizing Modernity in Islam
Legitimizing Modernity in Islam
The question of Islam’s compatibility with modernity has primarily beenapproached from one of three methodological positions: First, Islam (asvariable) must adapt itself to moderni...
Architectural theory as a tool for architectural criticism necessarily employed for the betterment of architectural education
Architectural theory as a tool for architectural criticism necessarily employed for the betterment of architectural education
Criticism, or "to criticize" derives from the Greek krinein meant to distinguish, which is to separate, to silt, to make a distinction. The word "theory" comes from the philosophic...

Back to Top