Description
An empirically grounded and context-specific insight into the material, spatial and bodily ways in which states of emergency operate in Turkey, through Architecture
About the Author
Eray Cayli is Leverhulme Trust Early Career Fellow at the London School of Economics and Political Science, UK. He has been published in a number of journals including Environment and Planning D, the International Journal of Islamic Architecture, Theory & Event and Etudes Armeniennes Contemporaines. Pinar Aykac is a conservation architect with a MSc in the Conservation of Cultural Heritage from the Middle East Technical University. Currently, she is a an instructor at the M.S. Program in Conservation of Cultural Heritage at the Middle East Technical University, Turkey. Sevcan Ercan is an architect and architectural history researcher with a particular interest in islands, and displacement and architecture. She obtained her BArch at Middle East Technical University and her MSc in Architectural History at Istanbul Technical University, Turkey.
Reviews
A vital reader in architectures of emergency in Turkey, the volume covers topics of cultural heritage, urban sprawl and resilient cities in the age of displaced masses. * Ali Cengizkan, TED University, Ankara *
At a time when states of exceptions are increasingly normalised, this incisive book argues that the built environment plays a key role in the politics of emergency. The authors reveal a range of inequalities and injustices underlying the production of space in contemporary Turkey, while also highlighting forms of social resistance that resonate worldwide. * Davide Deriu, University of Westminster, UK *
Book Information
ISBN 9780755645329
Author Dr Eray Cayli
Format Paperback
Page Count 240
Imprint I.B. Tauris
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing PLC