Constructing National Identity in
Post-Colonial India

by
Ravi Kalia

[October 22, 2004]

Streaming Video
1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5 - 6 - 7 - 8 - 9
Click to View Lecture
 

Based on Ravi Kalia's latest publication, Gandhinagar, this presentation traces India's efforts to establish its twentieth–century architectural identity. Kalia explains that Gandhinagar, the capital of Gujarat in western India, became a battleground for the competing ideals that had surfaced during the building of Chandigarh and Bhubaneswar.

Exploring the impact of modernist architecture on India as a whole, Kalia suggests that the style gained acceptance because its parsimonious designs and unadorned spaces never represented a threat to a religiously pluralist country anxious to create a secular identity. He explains how two competing versions of Indian history and ideology—Ganhdi's and Jawaharlal Nehru's—employed modernism's ideals for their own separate ends. Serving two masters, as Kalia illustrates, created constrictions and tensions evident in the building of Gandhinagar and in the careers of many Indian architects, including Doshi, Charles Correa, and Achyut Kanvinde.

 

 


Search AAARI.info

 

Lecture Archive


Fall 2005 - Spring 2006
 

Fall 2004 - Spring 2005
 

Fall 2003 - Spring 2004
 

Fall 2002 - Spring 2003
 

Spring 2002
 

Fall 2001
 


 
Home      About Us     AAHEC      Membership      News & Events     Lectures      Contacts      Discussion Forum      
  
 
Asian American / Asian Research Institute © 2007 •

25 West 43rd Street, Room 1000 New York, NY 10036   
Tel: 212-869-0182 - Fax: 212-869-0181 - info@aaari.info