2 | 2012
Corporate patronage
This volume of Architecture Beyond Europe examines the term “corporate” and its possible relationships to empire and architecture. In so doing, it considers not only the common usage/conception of corporate as a descriptor—i.e., the commercial dimension—but also its wider and more basic definition, particularly as it applies to organised groups or “bodies” of agents acting for reasons of common purpose. In some cases this went beyond the motivation of purpose to include the actual legal status and perceived responsibilities of such agents, leading to what might be described as “corporate architectures” in both the narrowest and broadest sense of that term.
-
Editorial
Editorial-
Corporations, Corporate Identity, and Imperial Architectures? [Texte intégral]
-
-
Articles
Articles-
The Corporatisation of Global Anglicanism [Texte intégral]Architecture, Organisation, and Faith-based Patronage in the Nineteenth-Century British Colonial World
-
Constructing a Shared Vision: Otto Koenigsberger and Tata & Sons [Texte intégral]
-
-
Documents/Sources
Documents/Sources-
Les actes de vente des villes du canal de Suez [Texte intégral]
-
-
Dissertation abstract
Compte rendu de thèse-
PhD diss., University of Melbourne, 2010
-
-
Reviews
Comptes rendus de lectures-
Petersberg: Michael Imhof Verlag, 2012 (Berliner Beiträge zur Bauforschung und Denkmalpflege, 12)
-
Re-thinking architect Kemalettin [Texte intégral]
-