Other Practices: Gendering Histories of Architecture

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.26754/ojs_zarch/zarch.2022186968

Keywords:

Women Architects, Female Writing, Gender, Alternatives Professionals, Feminist practices, Historiography

Abstract

“To write women back into history”, is an often-used phrase in recent feminist discourse. More and more scholars work to increase the visibility of those women who took charge of design projects in the recent and not so recent past. While crucial, such efforts are, in the paradox way of how privilege works, to an extent counterproductive: presenting these women (and other, historically marginalised figures) as exceptions from the rule – as eccentric trailblazers  - implies the majority of their female (or Black, indigenous, queer, other ...) contemporaries had no influence within (white, male) architectural practices. This position paper argues that we also need to look for other practices that enabled women (and others) in greater numbers to gain agency. Writing is one such practice: the recording of experience, critiques, and instructions to appropriate the designed, ascribing meaning to architectures and landscapes. Locating architectural agency in a practice that, while presuming some privilege, was much more open to marginalised groups than that of the architect, enables us to look at the past more inclusively: to write gendered histories that open up spaces for those that were there, in fact.

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Author Biography

Anne Hultzsch, ETH Zurich

Anne Hultzsch leads the ERC(Starting Grant)-funded group “Women Writing Architecture: Female Experiences of the Built, 1700-1900“ at GTA, the Institute for the History and Theory of Architecture, ETH Zurich. Previously, she has held positions at the Bartlett School of Architecture (UCL), University of Greenwich, New York University London as well as Queen Mary University of London. She has a PhD from UCL (2011) and was a postdoctoral fellow at AHO, Oslo, in the project “The Printed and the Built” (2014-18). Her research focuses on the role of women in architecture before 1900, on 18th and 19th-century architectural print cultures as well as the histories of perception and travel. Author of Architecture, Travellers and Writers: Constructing Histories of Perception 1640-1950 (Legenda, 2014), Anne has contributed to a number of journals and edited books. She is the co-editor of The Printed and the Built: Architecture, Print Culture, and Public Debate in the Nineteenth Century (with Mari Hvattum, Bloomsbury, 2018) and of Building Word Image: Printing Architecture 1800-1950, a special collection of Architectural Histories (with Catalina Mejía Moreno, 2016). Most recently, she has edited a special issue of The Journal of Architecture on the Nineteenth-Century Architectural Magazine (2020).

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Published

2022-09-02

How to Cite

Hultzsch, A. (2022). Other Practices: Gendering Histories of Architecture. ZARCH. Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies in Architecture and Urbanism, (18), 30–41. https://doi.org/10.26754/ojs_zarch/zarch.2022186968