The Role and Status Dilemas of Architects in Postsocialist City

Dalia Čiupailaitė (Vilnius University, Lithuania)

Abstract


This paper sets out to describe and conceptualize the social status and role of the architectural profession in post-socialist society. The turn towards market democracy from state socialism changes the material and symbolic conditions of the architectural profession. Privatization of the building and housing sectors transforms the architectural profession from previously a profession that had a say (even if it was limited) in city development processes into an entrepreneurial profession, depending on commissions from the private sector. In the article, I argue that architects claim a certain status as public intellectuals, but fluctuate towards an autonomisation of aesthetics in architecture, claiming architecture as art and trying to establish cultural capital as a legitimating strategy of certain decisions. The central theme in public discourse on architectu -re – generated by architects – is a dichotomy between architecture as art versus commercialized architecture. In this discourse, the role of “architects’ people” remains preempted. I argue that while claiming a status of “opposition”, architects ultimately add to the establishment and solidification of the current neoliberal order.

Article in: Lithuanian

Article published: 2014-04-30

Keyword(s): professions; architecture; architects; postsocialist society; discourse.

DOI: 10.3846/cpc.2014.03

Full Text: PDF pdf

 

Cited-By

1. ENVIRONMENTAL DISCOURSES AND THE QUESTION OF CREATIVE ENVIRONMENT IN A CITY
Tomas KAČERAUSKAS
JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING AND LANDSCAPE MANAGEMENT  vol: 24  issue: 2  first page: 108  year: 2016  
doi: 10.3846/16486897.2016.1141097



Coactivity: Philosophy, Communication / Santalka: Filosofija, Komunikacija ISSN 2029-6320, eISSN 2029-6339
This work is licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 License.