This essay introduces islands as urban artifact and archipelagos as urban model in order to deepen the rich interdisciplinary discussion between island and urban studies through the specificity of an architectural analysis of islands as built form and archipelagos as urban systems. Four examples are presented here to demonstrate the use of islands as “urban artifacts” and archipelagos as “urban models” within architecture and urban discourse. Built island artifacts and the widespread use of archipelago as model for urban design have been deployed as apparatuses of political power and social exclusion, often in conflict with ecological systems. Island Studies provides a novel interdisciplinary lens for furthering analyses of the social equit...
Over the last decade there have been a number of attempts to both imagine Manhattan’s pre-colonial p...
Islands have long been part of the tourist imaginary (DeLoughrey, 2013), particularly those with tro...
© 2016 Charity EdwardsThis paper claims our land bias renders the ocean invisible. I want to argue a...
Island studies tends to focus on peripheral, isolated, and marginal aspects of island communities, w...
Regional, national and global cities are disproportionately located on small islands and archipelago...
The ‘Island Cities and Urban Archipelagos’ conference explores the culture, economy, and politics of...
The accelerating and intensifying dynamics of the Anthropocene are highly topical for island studies...
From tourist paradises to immigrant detention camps, from offshore finance centres to strategic mili...
In literature islands are seen as mythical symbols of distance and solitude. Since cities are certai...
The figure of the island as a metonym for the planet is central to many allegories of the Anthropoce...
Islands were studied for a long time as simple peripheral territories, territories which flesh out t...
About architecture and the city, built, imagined and narrated, this book focuses on Manhattan and Ve...
: Over the last decade there have been a number of attempts to both imagine Manhattan’s pre-colonial...
Residential and tourism developments affect places and people across the world – their sheer number,...
Abstract: Since the earliest of times, islands have captured the artistic imagination—and, often, fo...
Over the last decade there have been a number of attempts to both imagine Manhattan’s pre-colonial p...
Islands have long been part of the tourist imaginary (DeLoughrey, 2013), particularly those with tro...
© 2016 Charity EdwardsThis paper claims our land bias renders the ocean invisible. I want to argue a...
Island studies tends to focus on peripheral, isolated, and marginal aspects of island communities, w...
Regional, national and global cities are disproportionately located on small islands and archipelago...
The ‘Island Cities and Urban Archipelagos’ conference explores the culture, economy, and politics of...
The accelerating and intensifying dynamics of the Anthropocene are highly topical for island studies...
From tourist paradises to immigrant detention camps, from offshore finance centres to strategic mili...
In literature islands are seen as mythical symbols of distance and solitude. Since cities are certai...
The figure of the island as a metonym for the planet is central to many allegories of the Anthropoce...
Islands were studied for a long time as simple peripheral territories, territories which flesh out t...
About architecture and the city, built, imagined and narrated, this book focuses on Manhattan and Ve...
: Over the last decade there have been a number of attempts to both imagine Manhattan’s pre-colonial...
Residential and tourism developments affect places and people across the world – their sheer number,...
Abstract: Since the earliest of times, islands have captured the artistic imagination—and, often, fo...
Over the last decade there have been a number of attempts to both imagine Manhattan’s pre-colonial p...
Islands have long been part of the tourist imaginary (DeLoughrey, 2013), particularly those with tro...
© 2016 Charity EdwardsThis paper claims our land bias renders the ocean invisible. I want to argue a...