Why did CIAM break down? : going to the backside of modern architecture
Memoirs of the Faculty of Engineering, Yamaguchi University Volume 50 Issue 1
Page 85-92
published_at 1999-10
Title
CIAMはなぜ崩壊したか : 近代建築の裏側から探る
Why did CIAM break down? : going to the backside of modern architecture
Creators
Kasahara Toshikazu
Source Identifiers
Creator Keywords
ancient Roman tradition
Germanic spirit
Catholicism
Religious Reformation
Renaissance
CIAM
CIAM(Congres Internationaux d'Architecture Moderne) propagated their modern way of architecture which ought to have possessed the spirit of Renaissance. The spirit has its origin in the ancient Roman tradition, the driving force at the core of the modern European society. In modern architecture the kind of change which CIAM aimed at with the Roman spirit was brought about by the social movements that took place amid the upheaval of the early 20th century Europe. The change, however, went against the spirit in the way CIAM defined it. Certain factors wedged into the ideal that CIAM had set and brought it under the influence of the other spirit that formed the modern Europe, the spirit diametrically opposite to the Roman spirit, the Germanic spirit. It was fostered by the Religious Reformation in the 15th century. That the Roman spirit was in consequence displaced by the Germanic spirit was the part and parcel of the cause for which CIAM broke down.
Languages
jpn
Resource Type
departmental bulletin paper
Publishers
山口大学工学部
Date Issued
1999-10
File Version
Version of Record
Access Rights
open access
Relations
[ISSN]1345-5583
[NCID]AA11422756
[isVersionOf]
[URI]http://memoirs.lib-e.yamaguchi-u.ac.jp/
Schools
工学部