Reproducing temples in Fremantle

This paper explores the production and reproduction of a sacred-soliciting built environment in the Western Australian port town of Fremantle, drawing attention to temple iconography produced in the first century of European settlement and its preservation and reproduction at the hands of local and...

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Main Author: Kerr, Thor
Format: Journal Article
Published: Routledge 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/9607
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author Kerr, Thor
author_facet Kerr, Thor
author_sort Kerr, Thor
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description This paper explores the production and reproduction of a sacred-soliciting built environment in the Western Australian port town of Fremantle, drawing attention to temple iconography produced in the first century of European settlement and its preservation and reproduction at the hands of local and national heritage movements since the 1970s. I show how Fremantle’s High Street solicits a sense of the sacred in its visitors, operating in a similar fashion to temple complexes such as Sukuh in Java. From purifying passage through the Whalers Tunnel under the Round House (the temple’s porch), the visitor will be guided up High Street through an assemblage of neoclassical facades to Kings Square (the temple’s house) with its mix of artefacts for Anglican, Masonic and nation-building narratives. The reading continues up High Street to the War Memorial on Monument Hill (the temple’s Holy of Holies) for which a draft conservation plan was released in 2010.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-96072017-09-13T16:08:34Z Reproducing temples in Fremantle Kerr, Thor sacred soliciting urban planning heritage studies temple architecture built environment cultural studies This paper explores the production and reproduction of a sacred-soliciting built environment in the Western Australian port town of Fremantle, drawing attention to temple iconography produced in the first century of European settlement and its preservation and reproduction at the hands of local and national heritage movements since the 1970s. I show how Fremantle’s High Street solicits a sense of the sacred in its visitors, operating in a similar fashion to temple complexes such as Sukuh in Java. From purifying passage through the Whalers Tunnel under the Round House (the temple’s porch), the visitor will be guided up High Street through an assemblage of neoclassical facades to Kings Square (the temple’s house) with its mix of artefacts for Anglican, Masonic and nation-building narratives. The reading continues up High Street to the War Memorial on Monument Hill (the temple’s Holy of Holies) for which a draft conservation plan was released in 2010. 2012 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/9607 10.1080/13527258.2011.576687 Routledge restricted
spellingShingle sacred soliciting
urban planning
heritage studies
temple architecture
built environment
cultural studies
Kerr, Thor
Reproducing temples in Fremantle
title Reproducing temples in Fremantle
title_full Reproducing temples in Fremantle
title_fullStr Reproducing temples in Fremantle
title_full_unstemmed Reproducing temples in Fremantle
title_short Reproducing temples in Fremantle
title_sort reproducing temples in fremantle
topic sacred soliciting
urban planning
heritage studies
temple architecture
built environment
cultural studies
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/9607