A New Urban Modernity? George Bernard Shaw’s Written Recollection of His Mother’s Cremation.

Kirjoittajat

  • Gian Luca Amadei Independent Scholar

Abstrakti

In a letter, written on Saturday, February 22, 1913, the Irish playwright George Bernard Shaw described to his actress friend Stella Campbell the eventful day of his mother’s funeral and cremation at Golders Green Crematorium in London. From Shaw’s recollection, two intertwined aspects of his experience emerge. One is internal—intellectual and emotional—and the other is external, informed by the environment in which this funerary experience took place. By retracing Shaw’s steps, this article questions the extent to which his recollections of the spatial qualities of the crematorium, London’s emerging metro system, and the newly planned suburb were signs of a new urban experience. I discuss the changing space of the city in the early twentieth century by drawing on urban history, death culture, and architecture. The intention is to highlight how these elements—transport, crematorium, and suburb—all embodied the notions of order and efficiency, which promised a new idea of urban living in early twentieth-century London.

Kirjoittajan esittely

Gian Luca Amadei, Independent Scholar

Dr. Gian Luca Amadei (ORCID: 0000-0002-4563-2680) is an independent academic researcher and internationally recognised design and architectural journalist. His research interests intersect between architecture, urban planning, sociology, and cultural context. Gian Luca completed his Ph.D. at the University of Kent in December 2014 with the research thesis The Evolving Paradigm of the Victorian Cemeteries: Their emergence and contribution to London's urban growth since 1833. During the academic year, 2018–19 Gian Luca was a visiting researcher at the Department of Sociology, University of York, to work on the framework of his postdoctoral research project titled Cremation Stories. He is currently one of the Associate Editors at Brief Encounters, the Consortium for the Humanities, and the Arts South-east England (CHASE) Postgraduate Journal. Gian Luca is an advocate of lifelong learning and is a Visiting Lecturer at the Royal College of Art in London.

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Julkaistu

2023-09-26