Document
Metadatos
Título
Indigenous Cosmogony and Andean Architecture in El Alto, Bolivia
Descripción
Abstract
This essay applies Bourdieu's analysis of the formation of the ‘scholastic habitus’ in medieval
times—elaborated in his 1967 afterword to his French translation of Erwin Panofsky's Gothic Architecture
and Scholasticism—to the correspondence between indigenous mental categories and architectural innovation the Bolivian ‘rebel city’ of El Alto. The principle of homology between mental categories and building layout (rooted in a shared habitus) can be used to interpret one of the most spectacular features of Bolivia's ‘emerging architectures’, known as chalets. The term chalet designates a hybrid structure consisting of a colorful and ornate penthouse and multi-story dwelling erected on building rooftops. The chalets are architectural forms embedded within an economy of symbolic goods characterized by a ‘dual truth’: they are at once material and symbolic; they perform economic functions while seeking public visibility. The conspicuous lifestyle advertised by the construction of chalets can be understood by reference to the rising social power of the indigenous elites (cholos) dominating the thriving ‘ethnic economy’ of the city. The fraternities of El Alto emerge as the structural equivalent of the scholastic institution that Bourdieu associated with Gothic architecture: they are the site of production of a specific habitus, shared by native urban categories defined by similar residential locations, economic activities and forms of collective organization.
Categoría
Artículo
Autor
Franck Poupeau
Año de publicación
2020
Lugar de publicación
Reino Unido
Lugar de estudio
El Alto
Editorial
International Journal of Urban and Regional Research
No. de páginas
14
Temas
idioma
inglés