THE MODERNIST CITY AN ANTHROPOLOGICAL CRITIQUE OF BRASfuA JAMES HOLSTON THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS CHICAGO AND LONDON Univerzitni knihovna Contents 7.apadoceske univerzity v p]zni KN100007978 List of illustrations vii James Holston is assistant professor of anthropology at the List of Tables xi University of California, San Diego. Acknowledgments xiii The University of Chicago Press, Chicago 60637 PART 1: THE MYTH OF THE CONcRETE 1 The University of Chicago Press, Ltd., London 1 Premises and Paradoxes 3 © 1989 by The University of Chicago Anthropology and Modernism 5 All rights reserved. Published 1989 The Idea of Brasilla 14 Printed in the United States of America The Instruments of Change 20 98 97 96 95 94 93 5432 The Negation of the Negation 23 2 Blueprint Utopia 31 Library of Congress Cataloging·in·Publication Data Brasilia's Pedigree 31 The Modernist Project 41 Holston, James. The modernist city : an anthropological critique of Brasflia I 3 The Plan's Hidden Agenda 59 James Holston. Plan Mythology 60 p. cm. The Hidden Agenda 74 Rev. ed. of thesis (doctoral)-Yale University. Bibliography: p. Brasflia's Development Inversions 77 Includes index. The Exemplary Center 85 ISBN 0-226-3497B-0. -ISBN 0-226-34979-9 (pbk.) Niemeyer's Social Architecture 88 1. New towns-Brazil-Brasma. 2. City planning-Brazil Modernism and Modernization 93 Brasflia. 3. Brasnia (Brazil)-Social conditions. 4. Urban The Counter-Brincadeira 98 anthropology-Case studies. 5. Architecture-Human factors. 6. Architecture, Modern-20th century. 7. Social aspects-Brazil- Brasma. I. TItJe. PART 2: THE CITY DEFAMILIARlZED 99 HT169.57.B62B634 1989 89-33482 307.76'B'09BI74-dclO CIP 4 The Death of the Street 101 The Architectural Context of Street Life 105 The Solid-VoidlFigure-Ground Convention 119 The Street in Ouro Preto: Private Property and Public Display 127 The Modernist Inversion 133 Transforming Civic Discourse: The New Public of Brasilia 136 5 Typologies of Order, Work, and Residence 145 § The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of the Zoning the City: A Typology of Form and Function 146 American National Standard for Information Sciences-Permanence of Paper for The Monumental Work Sectors 154 Printed Materials, ANSI Z39.48-1984. v Contents The Superquadra Solution 163 The Apartment Plan The Apartment Fm;ade illustrations PART 3: 1HE RECOVERY OF HISTORY 197 6 Rights to the City 199 Populating an Idea: Differential Incorporation 201 The Recruitment of Pioneers 206 Discourses of Participation: Reinventing the Nation The Labor Market Maps Recruitment 1.1 Population density of the states and the Federal Rights, Privileges, and Powers 225 District of Brazil, 1980 15 From Interests to Actions 24B 1.2 Distances between Brasilia and state capitals 19 7 Cities of Rebellion 257 1.3 Plana Piloto, satellite cities, and administrative re- The TIlegal Periphery 259 gions of the Federal District, 1980 27 The Legal Periphery 272 5.1 The organization of urban functions in Brasilia, 1975 152 Political-Administrative Organization: 5.2 Sectoral organization and traffic plan of the Plana The Climate of Tranquillity Piloto, 1980 155 Space and Sodeh): An Absolute Predominance 5.3 Traffic zones and sectors of Brasilia, 1975 194 of Public Servants 7.1 Growth of urban areas in the Federal District, 1960-75 258 S The BraziIianization of Brasfiia 2B9 7.2 Urban settlements and administrative regions of the The Periphery in Time and Space 290 Federal District, 1956-65 261 The Squatter Settlement of Vila Chaparr.l Center Street, Sobradinho The City Familiarized 30B Figures Concluding Remarks 314 2.1 Ludo Costa, master plan of Brasilia, 1957 33 Notes 319 2.2 Ludo Costa, perspective sketch of Brasilia, 1957 33 Bibliography 349 2.3 Le Corbusier, A Contemporary City for Three Mil- Index 359 lion Inhabitants, perspective sketch, 1922 33 2.4 Le Corbusier, A Contemporary City for Three Mil- lion Inhabitants, perspective, 1922 34 2.5 Le Corbusier, A Contemporary City for Three Mil- lion Inhabitants, perspective, 1922 34 2.6 Aerial view of the South Wing, Brasilia, 1981 34 2.7 Aerial view of the crossing of the Residential and Monumental axes, Brasilia, 19B1 34 2.B Monumental Axis, view of Congress and Esplanade of the Ministries, Brasilia, 19BO 34 2.9 Le Corbusier, model of the Radiant City showing residential sector, 1930 35 2.10 Le Corbusier, model of the Radiant City showing residential sector, 1930 35 2.11 View of the Residential sectors of the South Wing, Brasilia, 19B1 35 vii vi Illustrations Illustrations 2.12 View of housing blocks and playground of Super 4.12 Jean Baptiste Debret, Plan of the City of Rio de quadra 108 South, Brasilia, 1980 35 Janeiro, 1839 110 2.13 Aerial view of South Wing Superquadras 308, 307, 4.13 Jean Baptiste Debret, View of the Largo do Pahicio, 108, and 107, Brasilia, 1981 35 Rio de Janeiro (1816-31) 112 2.14 Le Corbusier's second project for the Ministry of 4.14 Jean Baptiste Debret, The Acclamation of Dam Pe Education and Culture, Rio de Janeiro, 1936 37 dro 11, Largo do Pahicio, Rio de Janeiro, 1831 112 2.15 Le Corbusier's second project for the Ministry of 4.15 Jean Baptiste Debret, The Refreshments of the Largo Education and Culture, Rio de Janeiro, 1936 37 do Pahkio, Rio de Janeiro (1816-31) 114 2.16 North elevation of the Ministry of Education and 4.16 Jean Baptiste Debret, The Barber Shop, Rio de Culture, Rio de Janeiro, 1937-43 37 Janeiro (1816-31) 114 2.17 Le Corbusier, Plan Voisin for Paris, 1925 54 4.17 Jean Baptiste Debret, The Folia of the Emperor 2.18 Hilberseimer, project for central Berlin, 1927 54 of the Holy Ghost, Rio de Janeiro (1816-31) 116 3.1 Example of a speculative apartment building, St. 4.18 Jean Baptiste Debret, A Bureaucrat Promenades Petersburg, 1913 61 with His Family, Rio de Janeiro, 1820 116 3.2 L. Alexander and V. Vesnin, dom-komnzuna, 'commu 4.19 Giuseppe Zocchi, Uffizi, Florence, 1754 121 nal house' , Kuznetsk, 1930 (proposal) 61 4.20 Figure-ground relations 122 3.3 M. Barshch and V. Vladimirov, axonometric draw 4.21 Figure-ground plan of Parma, 1830 124 ing of dom-kommuna proposed by Stroikom, the 4.22 Figure-ground plan of an east-west section of the Building Committee of the Russian Soviet Feder South Wing, Brasilia, c. 1960 124 ated Socialist Republic, 1930 61 4.23 Figure-ground plan of Munich, 1840 126 3.4 Perspective drawing and plan of dom-kommuna type 4.24 Figure-ground plan of Turin, 1840 126 F developed by Stroikom 61 4.25 Nolli plan of Rome, 1748 126 3.5 Llicio Costa, competition sketches for the Master 4.26 Figure-ground plan of New York, 1930 126 Plan of BrasHia, 1957 63 4.27 Le Corbusier's Plan Voisin for Paris, figure-ground 4.1 Largo do Pelourinho with a view of the museum of plan, 1925 126 the city and the fanner slave market, Salvador, 4.28 Rua Coronel Alves, looking toward the Igreja de 1980 102 Nossa Senhora do Canno, Qura Preta, 1980 130 4.2 Plaza of the Three Powers with a view of the 4.29 West elevation of the Igreja de N.S. do Carmo, Ouro Planalto Palace and the museum of the city, Bra Preto, 1980 131 silia, 1980 102 4.30 West and north elevations of the Igreja de N .5. do 4.3 Pra,a Tiradentes with a view of the former Pah,cio Carmo, Ouro Preto, 1980 131 Municipal and jail and the monument to 4.31 Rua Tiradentes, Ouro Preto, 1980 132 Tiradentes, Quro Preto, 1980 102 4.32 Superquadra apartment block, SQS lO8-Block E, Bra- 4.4 Plaza of the Three Powers with a view of the sflia, 1980 132 National Congress and the statue The Warriors, 4.33 Oty center, Ouro Preto, 1980 134 Brasilia, 1980 102 4.34 Monumental Axis, Brasilia, 1981 134 4.5 Aerial view of the Plaza of the Three Powers and the 4.35 Commercial Sector South, Brasilia, 1981 134 Esplanade of the Ministries, Brasilia, 1981 102 4.36 Residential Axis South, Brasilia, c. 1960 134 4.6 Residential street in the neighborhood BaITa Funda, 4.37 Llicio Costa's original proposal for a prototypical Sao Paulo, 1988 106 local commercial sector, from the Master Plan of 4.7 Residential Access Way Ll, Brasilia, 1980 106 BrasHia, 1957 140 4.8 Rua Boa Vista, downtown Sao Paulo, 1988 106 4.38 Local Commercial Sector 102 South, Brasilia, 1980 140 4.9 West Residential Highway Axis, BrasHia, 1980 106 4.39 Store "fronts" of Local Commercial Sector 4.10 Illustration of stereotypical pattern of rural land use 108 South, Brasilia, 1980 140 and building 108 4.40 Store "backs" of Local Commercial Sector 308 4.11 View of the Largo do Pelourinho, Salvador, 1980 108 South, Brasilia, 1980 140 ix viii Illustrations 4.41 Local Commercial Sector 204 North, Brasilia, 19BO 142 4.42 Local Commercial Sector 205/206 North, cailed Babylonia, Brasilia, 19BO 143 Tables 4.43 Local Commercial Sector 107/10B South, called the Street of the Little Church, Brasilia, 19BO 144 5.1 Listing of place names and abbreviations from Bra- silia's telephone directory, 19B1 151 5.2 Neighborhood unit of four superquadras 16B 5.3 Two examples of copas and kitchens 174 5.4 View of Superquadra South lOB and typical floor 1.1 Employed Population by Monthly Income: Brazil, plan, by Oscar Niemeyer, Brasilia, 1959 175 Sao Paulo, Federal District (1980); Sobradinho, DF 5.5 Model of Superquadra South 30B and plans of (1980); Sao Miguel Paulista, SP (1977) 26 entrance level and typical apartments, Brasilia, 5.1 Distribution of Employed Population by Sector of 1959 176 Activity, Federal District, 1970, 1975, 1980 188 6.1 Advertisement for the inauguration of Brasilia, Esso 5.2 Structure of Employed Labor Force by Subsector, Oil Company, 1960 212 Federal District, 1970, 1975, 1980 188 B.1 Center Street, Sobradinho, 19B1 302 5.3 Distribution of Jobs by Locality and Sector, 1975 189 B.2 Popular demonstration for direct presidential elec- 5.4 Spatial Distribution of Tertiary-Sector Jobs ·in the tions, Pra~a da Se, Sao Paulo, 25 January 19B4 312 Plana Piloto, 1973, 1975, 2000 (Summary) 1B9 B.3 View of the Pra~a da Se, Sao Paulo, 25 January 19B4 313 5.5 Distribution of Businesses in the Federal District by Locality, 1974 190 Graphs 5.6 Relations between Work and Residence: Commutw 5.1 Primary sector share of Federal District income, ing between the Satellite Cities and the Plana 1960-69 15B Piloto, 1970 191 5.2 Secondary sector share of Federal District income, 5.7 Commuter Trips by Motive and Locality, Federal 1960-69 15B District, 1975 191 5.3 Tertiary sector share of Federal District income, 5.8 Urban Population by Locailty, Federal District, 1960, 1960-69 15B 1970, 1975, 1980 192 5.4 Government share of tertiary sector income, Federal 5.9 Urban Population Change by Decade, Federal Dis- District, 1960-69 15B trict, 1960-80 192 B.1 Center-periphery distribution of Federal District 5.10 Residential Sectors: Population, Dwelling, Density, population, 1960, 1970, 1980 291 Green Areas, Income 193 B.2 Spatial distribution of average income in the Federal 5.11 Spatial Distribution of Average Income, Superquad- District, 1975 295 ras, 1975 195 6.1 Population by Type of Settlement, Federal District, 1959 251 6.2 Plana Piloto Residences Constructed by Federal Autarkies for the Inauguration of Brasilia, April 1960 252 6.3 Structure of Employed Labor Force by Subsectors, Federal District, 1959 253 6.4 Migration to the Federal District by Birthplace, Di- rectness of Migration, and Region of Last Resi w dence, 1959 253 6.5 Recrultrnent Category of Pioneers: Economically Ac- tive Members by Class, Occupational Field, and Income 254 xi x I .1 Acknowledgments Several institutions generously supported my study of Brasilia. I conducted the fieldwork in Brazil on which it is based between 1980 and 1982 with research grants from the Organization of American States, the Tinker Foundation, and Yale University under the auspices of the Concilium on International and Area Studies and the Williams Fund for Anthropological Research. From 1983 to 1985, I was fortunate to join the staff of the Helen Kellogg Institute for International Studies as a junior faculty fellow. This fellowship allowed me to concentrate on writing the first version of the study, which I presented as my doctoral dissertation to the Department of Anthropology at Yale Univer sity. To these organizations and their members I gratefully give my thanks. Through all stages of the doctorate, I had the great privilege of receiving criticism and encouragement from Professor M. G. Smith, who was my dissertation director, and Professor Guill ermo Q'Donnell. Whatever merits the dissertation may have had are due in no small measure to the inteIIectual standards they set and to the opportunities they provided for me to attempt to reach them. I am also indebted to the other members of my dissertation committee, Professors Alan Colquhoun and Harold Scheffler, for their suggestions on early drafts of the manuscript. In addition, I would like to acknowledge the contributions of Professors David Apter, Albert Fishlow, Fredric Jameson, and Emilia Viotti da Costa. I am particularly grateful to Professor Paul Rabinow for his suggestions on the first version and to Professor Terence Turner for his comments on the revised manuscript. One voice especially has been my guide not only in writing this book but also in surviving it, that of fellow anthropologist Teresa Pires do Rio Caldeira. To recount the times her judgment improved mine, to teII of her labors in producing the first draft, to talk of her patience and skill in considering my doubts would all be to say that her companionship has been essential. In this work, as in my other efforts, I have been fortunate indeed to have had the sustaining support of my parents Ruth and Marc Holston and my brother Rand. xiii Acknowledgments PART ONE My debts are great to the many in Brazil who have given me hospitality and assistance. In particular, I want to thank Profes sor Roberto Cardoso de Oliveira, who kindly accepted me as a THE MYTH OF THE CONCRETE research fellow in the Department of Social Sciences of the Universidade de Brasilia; Professor Helio Jaguaribe and the directors of IUPERJ (Instituto Universitario de Pesquisas do Rio de Janeiro), who provided me with a vital foothold in Brazil when I first arrived; Dr. Mariza G. S. Peirano, whose friendship was invaluable; Dr. Jayme de Assis Almeida, who generously allowed me to use material from his personal archive on the early history of Brasilia; and Rodrigo Bhering Andrade, Milton Feferman, Gustavo Lins Ribeiro, and Antonio Augusto G. S. Silva. I owe a special debt to the people of Brasilia, to the many who befriended me, who graciously accepted me and my incessant questioning, and who responded passionately about their city. If they had not insisted that I understand their experiences in Brasflia, my research would have amounted to nothing. I want especially to express my deep respect for the pioneers of the new capital. I should like them to know that although I have made a critical assessment of their city, they have my admiration for the courage and dedication with which they built it. Simi larly, I would like to record that although I criticize their work in Brasilia, architects Lucio Costa and Oscar Niemeyer also have my respect. With great skill and commitment, they have taken the risks of making public their vision of a new Brazil. xiv ONE Premises and Paradoxes The journey to Brasilia across the Central Plateau of Brazil is one of separation. It confronts the travel er with the separation of modernist BrasiIia from the familiar Brazil: from densely packed settlements along the coast to the emptiness of the interiori from layers of congestion and clutter in the big cities to the silent horizons of the plateau; from small town squares with their markets and conversations to the empty spaces of Brasilia without squares or markets; from civilization to the frontier; from underdevelopment to the incongruously modem. Mi grants make this journey mainly for economic gain. They seek jobs, higher wages, rapid advancement, and speculative oppor tunity in Brazil's new capital. Yet, however diverse their mo tives, they all share a sense of the city's separation from the rest of the country that this journey represents. For the migrant, it is this passage that establishes the identity of BrasUia as frontier city, development project, utopian experiment in modem ur banism, detached center of political power, Eldorado of oppor tunity. It is also this passage that contrasts the old Brazil with a plan to develop the new. As one travels across the desolate plateau toward the city, the landscape abruptly changes about 40 kilometers from the capital. The highway widens. Billboards announce lots for sale in future residential havens with names like New Brazil, New World, and New America. A gigantic, modem sculpture appears out of nowhere to suggest that something is about to happen. Still without visible signs of settlement, one is suddenly swept into a cloverleaf intersection of superspeedway proportions. At one carefully choreographed moment, Brasflia begins: a 14-lane speedway roars into view and catapults the traveler into what is hailed as lithe New Age of Brazil." Brasflia was built to be more than merely the symbol of this new age. Rather, its design and construction were intended as means to create it by transforming Brazilian society. This study analyzes the paired premises of this inversion in development an inversion in which urban form and organization are consid- 3 ONE Premises and Paradoxes The journey to Brasilia across the Central Plateau of Brazil is one of separation. It confronts the traveler with the separation of modernist Brasilia from the familiar Brazil: from densely packed settlements along the coast to the emptiness of the interior; from layers of congestion and clutter in the big cities to the silent horizons of the plateau; from small town squares with their markets and conversations to the empty spaces of Brasilia without squares or markets; fram civilization to the frontier; from underdevelopment to the incongruously modem. Mi grants make this journey mainly for economic gain. They seek jobs, higher wages, rapid advancement, and speculative oppor tunity in Brazil's new capital. Yet, however diverse their mo tives, they all share a sense of the city's separation from the rest of the country that this journey represents. Far the migrant, it is this passage that establishes the identity of Brasilia as frontier city, development project, utopian experiment in modem ur banism, detached center of political power, Eldorado of oppor tunity. It is also this passage that contrasts the old Brazil with a plan to develop the new. As one travels across the desolate plateau toward the city, the landscape abruptly changes about 40 kilometers from the capitaL The highway widens. Billboards announce lots for sale in future residential havens with names like New Brazil, New World, and New America. A gigantic, modern sculpture appears out of nowhere to suggest that something is about to happen. Still without visible signs of settlement, one is suddenly swept into a cloverleaf intersection of superspeedway proportions. At one carefully choreographed moment, BrasfIia begins: a 14-lane speedway roars into view and catapults the traveler into what is hailed as lithe New Age of Brazil.lI Brasilia was built to be more than merely the symbol of this new age. Rather, its design and construction were intended as means to create it by transforming Brazilian society. This study analyzes the paired premises of this inversion in development an inversion in which urban fonn and organization are consid- 3 The Myth of the Concrete Premises and Paradoxes ered instruments of social change. The first premise is that the fundamentally altered the urban environment in which nearly plan for a new city can create a social order in its image; that is, half the world's people live. Postmodern critics tell us today that one based on the values that motivate its design. The second this modernism is now finished, its creativity exhausted. Yet, I premise projects the first as a blueprint for change in the context would suggest another aspect of the problem: if modernism is of national development. It proposes that the new city should be dying, it nevertheless remains dominant, at the very least in the a model of radically different social practices. It argues that if third world. A study of Brasnia therefore offers an opportunity this model could serve as an exemplar of progress for the rest of to evaluate its dominant assumptions in a context in which they the nation, then it would be passible not only to generalize its are expressed with particular clarity. innovations, but also to propel the country as a whale into the In analyzing the second set of intentions-the government's planned future it embodies. In this way, planners could stimu plan to build Brasilia-I suggest a number of different but late leaps in the development process itself, causing the nation related points about development. On the one hand, I analyze to skip undesired stages in its evolution. Subsequent chapters the role of modernist architecture and city planning in develop demonstrate that bath premises motivated the building of ment projects which require massive state intervention and Brasilia in 1957 as the modernist capital of a newly industrializ centralized coordination. This issue is especially important in ing Brazil. However, they also show that as Brazilian society third-world countries, where the modernist aesthetic appeals to inhabited the built city, these premises engendered a set of governments across the political spectrum. To explain this social processes which paradoxically yet unequivocally de unusual appeal, I suggest a number of affinities between mod stroyed the planners' utopian intentions. ernism as an aesthetic of erasure and reinscription and modern I have two sets of objectives in this demonstration. One ization as an ideology of development in which governments, concerns the case study of a modernist capital built for Brazil. regardless of persuasion, seek to rewrite national histories. The other addresses the question of how an anthropologist On the other hand, I examine Brasilia as an example of a should study modernism and, more generally, the modem common type of development projed founded on a paradox. In world. The objectives of the case study are several: first, to portraying an imagined and desired future, Brasilia represented provide an ethnographic account-a description based on my a negation of existing conditions in Brazil. This utopian differ field research-of the consequences of Brasilia's founding pre ence between the two is precisely the project's premise. Yet, at mises for the development of its social orders and disorders, and the same time, the government intended it as a means to second, to analyze the motivations and entaiIments of these achieve this future-as an instrument of change which would, planning precepts. Thus, when I refer to an analysis of pre of necessity, have to use the existing conditions it denied. My mises, I mean to include what they intend, their internal point in analyzing this apparent paradox is not to dispute the coherence, the instruments and conditions they entail in the need for utopia in imagining a better world. Indeed, in the world, and the interpretations and social processes they engage. course of the book I shall oppose the postmodern abandonment This study requires that we differentiate between the various of alternative futures. My aim is rather to determine the ways in components of the planned city: between the architects' inten which, in the construction of the city and the making of its tions for social change, embodied in its design, and the govern:" society, the paradoxes of utopia subverted its initial premises. ment's intentions to build and occupy it. In evaluating the On this subversion-on the way in which the people of Brasilia former, I present Brasilia as an exemplar of the tenets of engaged these premises at their points of contradiction to modernist architecture and city planning. Proposed by avant reassert the social processes and cultural values utopia intended garde groups in Western Europe and the Soviet Union and to deny-I focus my ethnographic account. adopted in Brazil, these tenets constitute a radical recon'ceptu alization of city life. Brasilia is probably their most complete realization. Nevertheless, what is found as a totality in Brasilia is 1.1 Anthropology and Modernism found as fragments large and small in cities throughout the world because in this century of phenomenal urban growth When I began fieldwork in Brasnia in 1980, one of my architectural theory, debate, education, and practice have been objectives was to link ethnographic activity with the set of set in modernist terms. It is therefore not too great a generali critical attitudes known as modernism. By the latter, I refer to zation to say that the modernist vision of a new way of life has the disenchantments of the avant-gardes-dadaism, surreal- 4 5
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