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CALL
FOR SUBMISSIONS FOR MONU - magazine on urbanism #9 - EXOTIC URBANISM The fascination with the exotic and its appearance in our cities has a long history, although at first merely going in one direction: from the West to the East. Interest in the exotic by the Western World was first stimulated by trade with the Eastern World back in the 16th century. But right from the start there has always been this intriguing contradiction in the term exotic as being on the one hand associated with fantasies of opulence and barbaric splendour, yet on the other hand considered as integer, uncorrupted and tasteful. The charm of the unfamiliar with its thrill of menace hasnt lost its attraction even today and has been turned into a global phenomenon that can no longer be discussed within the narrow-minded Orient Occident dialectic. These days, all kinds of foreign urban elements evoke the atmosphere of far-off lands all over the world. A finish sauna can be as exotic in Sao Paulo as Islamic ornamental motifs on a building in New York City. MONU#9 investigates what the term exotic actually means for our cities and how exotic urban elements appear, what they look like, and how they may influence our cities. In any case, exotic urban features appear more and more as an inexhaustible source for progressive urban design ideas. When the exotic influenced the appearance of the Art Nouveau at the end of the 19th century, it might today have the power to create an Urban Nouveau. We
invite daring concepts, mind-stretching speculations and ground-breaking
new strategies about the topic Exotic Urbanism for our next
issue of MONU. Submissions may be essays, photography, art projects or
design concepts that trigger the term exotic in the urban
context. MONU #9 will be published in the summer of 2008. Submissions
or questions should be sent to info@monu-magazine.com
by the end of June 2008. |
BERND
UPMEYER
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| Image: Collection of John Foster, accidentalmysteries.com: © copyright 2008 |