Modern Architecture: History & Theory

This course investigates the history of a wide range of buildings, architecture, cities, landscapes and theory across the 20th century around the world. We interrogate the deep legacies of colonialism, globalization, extractivism and capitalism in which modern architecture so actively participated.

Fulfills minor requirements for: Architectural History, Architecture (non-majors)

48-241
Instructor: Kai Gutschow
book covers of readings from the course "48-241/48-641: Modern Architecture: History & Theory"

A selection of readings from the course Modern Architecture: History & Theory.

This course investigates the history of a wide range of buildings, architecture, cities, landscapes and theory across the 20th century around the world. The content is organized around five major themes: decolonization, climate change, technology, social justice and theory. The course explores major movements and monuments of the Euro-American avant-garde and so-called “heroes” of modernism, but also diverse responses to modernity, including popular, tropical, vernacular, indigenous and even anti-architecture around the world. We ask critical questions about the modern canon, the changing nature of history and theory, the biases embedded in terms like “modernism,” “progress” and “Non-Western,” and even “architecture.” We interrogate the deep legacies of colonialism, globalization, extractivism and capitalism in which modern architecture so actively participated. The work includes weekly critical reflections on the readings and lectures, as well as a semester-long research project investigating “Non-Canonical” buildings from the Global South from three distinct eras in the 20th century.