First
World / Third World
Duality and Coincidence in Traditional Environments
Conference
Description
The International Association for the Study
of Traditional Environments is pleased to announce its second meeting.
Ushered in by momentous political changes around the world, this
conference will further explore the limits of interdisciplinary and
crosscultural communication in the field of traditional environments.
Over the course of four days, participants will move beyond the
provocative debates of the 1988 Symposium on Traditional Dwellings and
Settlements in Comparative Perspective toward more focused discussions
on such topics as innovation as a source of tradition, contradictions
between tradition and modernity, dualities in First World-Third World
conceptualizations, ideologies of space interpretation, historical
perspectives on the impacts of colonialism on the built environment,
and methodological issues in interpretation and classification.
This year's conference will continue on the
earlier practice of bringing together specialists from a wide spectrum
of disciplines, cultures and regions. IASTE invites scholars in the
fields of architecture, art history, anthropology, archaeology,
folklore, geography, history, planning, sociology, urban studies, and
other related disciplines to participate in the conference sessions
highlighted below. Join us in what promises to be a highly stimulating
event.
Pre-registration
Information
Interested scholars who wish to register for
the conference should send a request with name, affiliation, and
mailing address. Payment should be in the form of check, money order,
or international bank draft should be made
payable to Regents of University of California, Berkeley no later than
July 1st, 1990. The conference will be held at Boalt Hall. All
inquiries should be addressed to:
IASTE
Center for Environmental Design Research
390 Wurster Hall
University of California
Berkeley, CA 94720-1839, USA
Regular $150 ($175
after July 1, 1990) Includes opening reception, conference abstracts,
program materials, and pass to all plenary and theme sessions.
Student $75 ($80 after July 1, 1990) Includes opening
reception, program materials, and pass to all plenary and theme
sessions. An official student verification is required. "
Conference registration fees include IASTE membership and subscription
to the biannual journal, Traditional Dwellings and Settlements Review
for 1990-1991.
Organizing Committee
Nezar AlSayyad,
Conference Director, University of California, Berkeley
Jean-Paul Bourdier, Conference Co-Director, University of California,
Berkeley
Anna Edmondson, Project Coordinator, University of California,
Berkeley
Keynote Speakers
and Plenary Sessions
Janet Abu-Lughod, USA, The
Disappearance and De-Spatialization of the First World-Third World
World Dichotomies
Samir Amin, Senegal, Eurocentrism and Tradition: First World
Third World architectural dualities
Hasan-Uddin Khan, First World Third World architectural
dualities
Lisa Peattie, U.S.A, Informal Settlements and the Issue of
Tradition
John Turner, U.K, Rebuilding Working Neighborhoods and the
Rediscovery of Tradition
Dell Upton, U.S.A, Dualities in the New World
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