Aesthetic Regime Change: The Burnham Plans and US Landscape Imperialism in the Philippines

Taking Daniel Burnham’s 1904–1905 visit to the Philippines as a starting point, thisarticle examines the unrealized dream of US colonial officials to extend American empire through the production of space, particularly the aesthetic dimensions or what might be called a landscape vision of US empire....

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Main Author: Kirsch, Scott; University
Format: text
Published: Archīum Ateneo 2017
Online Access:https://archium.ateneo.edu/phstudies/vol65/iss3/3
https://archium.ateneo.edu/context/phstudies/article/4234/viewcontent/6353.pdf
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Institution: Ateneo De Manila University
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spelling ph-ateneo-arc.phstudies-42342024-08-07T03:42:03Z Aesthetic Regime Change: The Burnham Plans and US Landscape Imperialism in the Philippines Kirsch, Scott; University Taking Daniel Burnham’s 1904–1905 visit to the Philippines as a starting point, thisarticle examines the unrealized dream of US colonial officials to extend American empire through the production of space, particularly the aesthetic dimensions or what might be called a landscape vision of US empire. It offers a brief but intimate history of the making of the Burnham plans for Manila and Baguio so as to better understand how the ideological contradictions of the imperial moment were built into American colonial spaces, sometimes brutally but sometimes through aesthetic means in the formation of setting and landscape.Keywords: landscape • urban planning • Daniel H. Burnham • W. Cameron Forbes • US Insular Government 2017-09-25T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://archium.ateneo.edu/phstudies/vol65/iss3/3 https://archium.ateneo.edu/context/phstudies/article/4234/viewcontent/6353.pdf Philippine Studies: Historical and Ethnographic Viewpoints Archīum Ateneo
institution Ateneo De Manila University
building Ateneo De Manila University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider Ateneo De Manila University Library
collection archium.Ateneo Institutional Repository
description Taking Daniel Burnham’s 1904–1905 visit to the Philippines as a starting point, thisarticle examines the unrealized dream of US colonial officials to extend American empire through the production of space, particularly the aesthetic dimensions or what might be called a landscape vision of US empire. It offers a brief but intimate history of the making of the Burnham plans for Manila and Baguio so as to better understand how the ideological contradictions of the imperial moment were built into American colonial spaces, sometimes brutally but sometimes through aesthetic means in the formation of setting and landscape.Keywords: landscape • urban planning • Daniel H. Burnham • W. Cameron Forbes • US Insular Government
format text
author Kirsch, Scott; University
spellingShingle Kirsch, Scott; University
Aesthetic Regime Change: The Burnham Plans and US Landscape Imperialism in the Philippines
author_facet Kirsch, Scott; University
author_sort Kirsch, Scott; University
title Aesthetic Regime Change: The Burnham Plans and US Landscape Imperialism in the Philippines
title_short Aesthetic Regime Change: The Burnham Plans and US Landscape Imperialism in the Philippines
title_full Aesthetic Regime Change: The Burnham Plans and US Landscape Imperialism in the Philippines
title_fullStr Aesthetic Regime Change: The Burnham Plans and US Landscape Imperialism in the Philippines
title_full_unstemmed Aesthetic Regime Change: The Burnham Plans and US Landscape Imperialism in the Philippines
title_sort aesthetic regime change: the burnham plans and us landscape imperialism in the philippines
publisher Archīum Ateneo
publishDate 2017
url https://archium.ateneo.edu/phstudies/vol65/iss3/3
https://archium.ateneo.edu/context/phstudies/article/4234/viewcontent/6353.pdf
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