MIT Libraries logoDSpace@MIT

MIT
View Item 
  • DSpace@MIT Home
  • MIT Open Access Articles
  • MIT Open Access Articles
  • View Item
  • DSpace@MIT Home
  • MIT Open Access Articles
  • MIT Open Access Articles
  • View Item
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

A Landscape “Difficult to Describe”: The Model Village and the Capital City

Author(s)
Springstubb, Phoebe
Thumbnail
DownloadA Landscape Difficult to Describe The Model Village and the Capital City.pdf (6.475Mb)
Publisher with Creative Commons License

Publisher with Creative Commons License

Creative Commons Attribution

Terms of use
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
Metadata
Show full item record
Abstract
In mid-twentieth-century Punjab, grassroots development projects sought to modernize the countryside by decentralizing power to villages. The capital city Chandigarh, built in the same period, seems to represent the opposite: a national symbol of a newly independent India’s centralized power. Yet, this article argues, rural and urban were reciprocal and volatile counterparts. Through the work of M.S. Randhawa, it reorients analysis of Chandigarh to reveal how the materiality of landscape itself was a medium for territorial planning, indelibly linking—and managing the distinctions between—city and countryside. A botanist and civil servant, Randhawa used landscape to realize modernizing agendas and to constrain social change in projects from model villages and a “bioaesthetic” plan for the city to new land-grant universities that ushered in the Green Revolution’s industrialized agriculture. His work offers a revisionist history of development’s practitioners and periodization. It shows how an uneven fabric of late-colonial rural uplift shaped the contours of postcolonial, state-directed agrarian transformation. Following the civil servant in the landscape, this article calls for the grounding of abstract theories like development and state formation in histories of their local inflections.
Date issued
2023-03-22
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/164208
Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Architecture
Journal
Architectural Theory Review
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Citation
Springstubb, P. (2022). A Landscape “Difficult to Describe”: The Model Village and the Capital City. Architectural Theory Review, 26(3), 486–518.
Version: Final published version
ISSN
1326-4826
1755-0475

Collections
  • MIT Open Access Articles

Browse

All of DSpaceCommunities & CollectionsBy Issue DateAuthorsTitlesSubjectsThis CollectionBy Issue DateAuthorsTitlesSubjects

My Account

Login

Statistics

OA StatisticsStatistics by CountryStatistics by Department
MIT Libraries
PrivacyPermissionsAccessibilityContact us
MIT
Content created by the MIT Libraries, CC BY-NC unless otherwise noted. Notify us about copyright concerns.