Imported but Not Delivered: the Construction of Modern Domesticity and the Spatial Politics of Mass Housing in 1930s' Ankara

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Date

2012

Authors

Kilinç, Kıvanç

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Volume Title

Publisher

Routledge Journals, Taylor & Francis Ltd

Open Access Color

Green Open Access

No

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Top 10%
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Top 10%

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Abstract

The social history of the modern house in the early years of the Turkish Republic has predominantly been told as the story of the affluent. This group's residential, professional and entertainment culture became a prime marker of modernisation whereas Turkish architectural historians have limited their research largely to the cubic style single family houses built for and by the upper and middle classes. But can these models explain the complexity of the modern house in 1930s' Turkey? How did architectural layouts, when transferred to different social, cultural and spatial contexts, contribute to the production of gendered divisions? My article adopts domesticity, gender and class as a framework to identify the emergence of indigenous forms of modern architecture and urbanism in early republican Ankara. Analysing the Workers' Houses Settlement (1938), I argue that although individual units were characterised by minimalised spatial configurations, the layouts significantly deviated from Western models. Furthermore, by appropriating localised building traditions and living with extended families, lower-income residents shifted the widely disseminated image of the middle-class ideal of domesticity imported from Central and Western Europe, which has become integral to Turkey's official discourse of modernism since the 1930s.

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Fields of Science

0601 history and archaeology, 06 humanities and the arts

Citation

WoS Q

Scopus Q

Q2
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OpenCitations Citation Count
2

Source

Journal of Archıtecture

Volume

17

Issue

6

Start Page

819

End Page

846
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Scopus : 9

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