Abstract

The following essay was originally commissioned for the 1986 Evening Lecture Series at the University of Waterloo.This article deals with the predicament of architecture and architects under apartheid. It has been said that “South Africa would be the ideal place to practice architecture, if it were not for the political situation.” In some ways, this ironic statement seems true; but might not these ideal conditions be directly related to the conditions created by apartheid? What does this imply about our notions of “ideal conditions”? Is a radical practice possible and effective? Is a conventional practice necessarily co-opted to the ends of the state? What transformations in symbolic reading have occurred within formal vocabularies adopted from non-African sources, and how are these transformations related to political conditions? What relation does current work bear to the colonial and vernacular African traditions, and how are its meaning and validity affected by these references in the context of apar...

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