The poetics of Claremont disrupted

Redevelopment of the historic shopping district of Claremont started with extensive demolition. The new development, called Claremont Quarter, is characterised by architecture of non-place and the erasure of much of the old poetics. Visitors are highly directed in how they move around in a heavily p...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Harris, Jennifer
Format: Journal Article
Published: Curtin University 2012
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/27618
_version_ 1848752313595854848
author Harris, Jennifer
author_facet Harris, Jennifer
author_sort Harris, Jennifer
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Redevelopment of the historic shopping district of Claremont started with extensive demolition. The new development, called Claremont Quarter, is characterised by architecture of non-place and the erasure of much of the old poetics. Visitors are highly directed in how they move around in a heavily planned setting. This is in stark contrast to the remaining old Claremont which is characterised by a rough accretion of walls and buildings constructed over many periods; it offers to visitors many possible ways to use the area. In the redevelopment, the poetics of the district have been entirely disregarded. This paper reflects on the poetics of Claremont arguing that the subtle, dialogic poetics of place is an area of heritage practice which, if it is considered at all, is bracketed under sense of place analysis. Poetics, however, is quite different from sense of place, referring more emphatically to everyday experience; it is open-ended, dialogic, gesturing to the future and bringing place and people together. An understanding of poetics leads necessarily to a richer perception of people's interaction with place that is possible in sense of place analysis. This paper argues that it is time for heritage practice to include poetics as a key aspect of place understanding.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T08:06:38Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-27618
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T08:06:38Z
publishDate 2012
publisher Curtin University
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-276182017-01-30T13:00:05Z The poetics of Claremont disrupted Harris, Jennifer Redevelopment of the historic shopping district of Claremont started with extensive demolition. The new development, called Claremont Quarter, is characterised by architecture of non-place and the erasure of much of the old poetics. Visitors are highly directed in how they move around in a heavily planned setting. This is in stark contrast to the remaining old Claremont which is characterised by a rough accretion of walls and buildings constructed over many periods; it offers to visitors many possible ways to use the area. In the redevelopment, the poetics of the district have been entirely disregarded. This paper reflects on the poetics of Claremont arguing that the subtle, dialogic poetics of place is an area of heritage practice which, if it is considered at all, is bracketed under sense of place analysis. Poetics, however, is quite different from sense of place, referring more emphatically to everyday experience; it is open-ended, dialogic, gesturing to the future and bringing place and people together. An understanding of poetics leads necessarily to a richer perception of people's interaction with place that is possible in sense of place analysis. This paper argues that it is time for heritage practice to include poetics as a key aspect of place understanding. 2012 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/27618 Curtin University fulltext
spellingShingle Harris, Jennifer
The poetics of Claremont disrupted
title The poetics of Claremont disrupted
title_full The poetics of Claremont disrupted
title_fullStr The poetics of Claremont disrupted
title_full_unstemmed The poetics of Claremont disrupted
title_short The poetics of Claremont disrupted
title_sort poetics of claremont disrupted
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/27618