Symposium 'Building Like a State: Architecture and Nomad-State Relations in Historical Perspective'

Cambridge , United States
77 Massachusetts Ave, Room 56-114
Maggie Freeman
maggiefr@mit.edu

Throughout history, states and empires have used architecture to subdue and defend against nomadic peoples perceived as troublesome and threatening. Architectural history tends to read such building projects solely as evidence of top-down state control, and to position nomadism and permanent architecture as mutually exclusive. This symposium contests these narratives, highlighting the diversity of building practices among nomadic communities and the nuanced ways in which nomads engage with and respond to state building projects. Through papers offered by historians, anthropologists, architects, and artists, with a global focus spanning North America, Scandinavia, the Middle East, and Asia, this symposium uses architecture as a lens onto understanding and reframing nomad-state relations in the past and present.


Throughout history, states and empires have used architecture to subdue and defend against nomadic peoples perceived as troublesome and threatening. Architectural history tends to read such building projects solely as evidence of top-down state control, and to position nomadism and permanent architecture as mutually exclusive. This symposium contests these narratives, highlighting the diversity of building practices among nomadic communities and the nuanced ways in which nomads engage with and respond to state building projects. Through papers offered by historians, anthropologists, architects, and artists, with a global focus spanning North America, Scandinavia, the Middle East, and Asia, this symposium uses architecture as a lens onto understanding and reframing nomad-state relations in the past and present.  

For more info: http://akpia.mit.edu/symposium-building-like-a-state

Date and Time:
Saturday, March 4, 2023
10.00 AM - 4.00 PM

Free to attend, registration required (lunch will be provided to all attendees): https://www.eventbrite.com/e/building-like-a-state-tickets-517437378127

PROGRAM

10.00 
WELCOME NOTE 
Huma Gupta, MIT
OPENING REMARKS
Maggie Freeman, MIT

PANEL 1
BUILDING FOR THE STATE
Respondent: Huma Gupta, MIT
10.15
The Case of the UAE Sha’abi House:
Appropriating Architecture and Forming a State
Yasser Elsheshtawy, Columbia University
10.45 
“Tombs, Mummies and Bones Lie Silent:”
The Paradox of “Dead Cities” in Late Imperial and Early Soviet Russia, 1880-1905.
Ismael Biyashev, University of Illinois 
11.15 
Desert Control: A Story in Four Acts
Maggie Freeman, MIT
11.45 
DISCUSSION AND Q&A 
12.00
LUNCH BREAK

PANEL 2
BUILDING IN THE STATE
Respondent: Thomas Barfield, Boston University
13.00
“Functionalism” of Settlements for Tibetan Pastoralists in China 
Jarmila Ptackova, Czech Academy of Sciences
13.30 
Governing Nomads in and from Ashgabat and Bishkek, Soviet Central Asia in the 1920s and 1930s
Alun Thomas, Staffordshire University
14.00 
Peripheral Interest? Sámi Building in Nordic Architectural Discourse
Sofia Singler, University of Cambridge
14.30 
DISCUSSION AND Q&A 
14.45 
COFEE BREAK

 PANEL 3
BUILDING WITH THE STATE
Respondent: Mark Jarzombek, MIT
15.00 
Sámi Placemaking through a Mobile Library 
Joar Nango, Independent Artist
15.30 
National Belonging and the Design of Bedouin Towns in the Negev Desert
Noam Shoked, Tel Aviv University
16.00 
Working with the Nunavimiut and Nunavumiut in the Canadian Arctic:
The Architects’ Changing Role over the Last 40 Years
Alain Fournier, EVOQ Architects
16.30
DISCUSSION AND Q&A
 16.45 
CONCLUDING REMARKS

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SAH thanks The Richard H. Driehaus Foundation
for its operating support.
Society of Architectural Historians
1365 N. Astor Street
Chicago, Illinois 60610
312.573.1365