Understanding a Future Yet to Take Shape

The Worlds of Butler, Le Guin and Atwood as Prism for Building (in) Society

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.59490/footprint.18.1.6945

Abstract

An issue on narrating shared futures (‘How will we live together?’) implies being able to conceive of a mutual and shared experience. The history of shared heritages often contains other figures in the margins: those who were not seen as part of the dominant cultural narrative, or whose contribution to its heritage went unacknowledged. The holistic view of the 2018 Davos declaration on Baukultur embraces a more integral view of the built environment and society. In order to explore some of the cultural narratives that shape our past and envision a shared future, this article takes a closer look at three science fiction authors and how their stories draw lessons from the past into a narration of possible futures. Ursula K. Le Guin, Octavia Butler and Margaret Atwood have each envisioned futures that draw from contemporary developments and expand them to an overarching logic as the setting of their tales. Rather than directly examining (un)built heritages, this article examines the underlying cultural logic of building on the past. If architecture provides a foundation for a shared (and inclusive) future, the stories constructed by these authors show how the built environment resonates with societal principles, aiding or hindering particular collective values.

Author Biography

Lara Schrijver, University of Antwerp

Lara Schrijver is professor in architecture theory at the University of Antwerp, Faculty of Design Sciences. Her research focuses on twentieth-century architecture and its theories. Her work has been widely published in architecture journals and she has served as editor for Footprint Architecture Theory Journal and OASE as well as for the KNOB Bulletin. She was co-editor of Autonomous Architecture in Flanders (2016), of three editions of the annual review Architecture in the Netherlands (2016-2019), and editor of The Tacit Dimension: Architecture Knowledge and Scientific Research (2021). Her most recent book is Oswald Mathias Ungers and Rem Koolhaas (2021).

References

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Published

2024-09-30