Special Event: Cambridge Talks X Conference

Date: 

Thursday, April 14, 2016, 3:00pm to 6:00pm

Location: 

Gund Hall, 48 Quincy Street, Piper Auditorium

"Bound and Unbound: The Sites of Utopia"

Please visit the conference website for additional details: cambridgetalksx.com. This conference is free and open to the public.

Co-sponsored by the Graduate School of Design and the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Student Council, Harvard University.

In the five hundred years since the publication of Thomas More’s Of A Republic’s Best State and of the New Island of Utopia (1516), the project of imagining an ideal society has emerged as simultaneously regenerative and devastating on multiple fronts: for the concept of the polity, for the composition of social fabrics, and, most relevant from the vantage of the design disciplines, for the formation of buildings, cities, and territories. This year’s Cambridge Talks, now in its tenth edition, aims to provide a spectrum of exemplary instances of utopia’s modern guise.

In the main conference panels, we bring together speakers to address the rivalry between those utopian endeavors that organize space mainly through social relations and production, and those whose expansive impulse searches out some form of technical mastery over spatial configuration. In other words, utopia can be understood as either embodied or totalizing, bound or unbound. By taking examples from the 19th and 20th centuries, the case studies presented here—from communes and plantations to infrastructural projects and global ecologies—exhibit various attempts to imagine social conditions alongside spatial ones. A concluding discussion will touch upon the philosophical and theoretical ramifications of utopia today.

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