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Architecture, Power, And Poverty: Emergence Of The Union Workhouse Apparatus In The Early Nineteenth-Century England

Author
Kodalak, Gokhan
Abstract
This essay is about the interaction of architecture, power, and poverty. It is about the formative process of the union workhouse apparatus in the early nineteenth-century England, which is defined as a tripartite combination of institutional, architectural, and everyday mechanisms consisting of: legislators, official Poor Law discourse, and administrative networks; architects, workhouse buildings, and their reception in professional journals and popular media; and paupers, their everyday interactions, and ways of self-expression such as workhouse ward graffiti. A cross-scalar research is utilized throughout the essay to explore how the union workhouse apparatus came to be, how it disseminated in such a dramatic speed throughout the entire nation, how it shaped the treatment of pauperism as an experiment for the modern body-politic through the peculiar machinery of architecture, and how it functioned in local instances following the case study of Andover union workhouse.
Date Issued
2015-01-26Subject
Union Workhouse Apparatus; Power; Body-politic; Poverty; Pauper
Committee Chair
Woods, Mary Norman
Committee Co-Chair
Lasansky, Diana Medina
Degree Discipline
History of Architecture and Urban Development
Degree Name
M.A., History of Architecture and Urban Development
Degree Level
Master of Arts
Type
dissertation or thesis