Print release [online Open Access] | Volume 7, No. 1 Landscapes of Care: the emergence of landscapes of care in extreme territories

 
 
 

PRINT release [ONLINE Open Access] | Volume 7, No. 1 Landscapes of Care: the emergence of landscapes of care in extreme territories

PT/ENG

Print release of Volume 7 of the Sophia Journal publication 'Landscapes of Care: the emergence of landscapes of care in extreme territories' is

Available online with free access at www.up.pt/revistas/index.php/sophia.

Created in 2016, Sophia Journal publishes theoretical articles and visual essays that investigate and think critically the intersections between the image and architecture. An open access, peer-reviewed and indexed journal, published by the Centre for Studies in Architecture and Urbanism (CEAU) - Research group Architecture, Art, and Image (AAI) at the Faculty of Architecture, University of Porto, Portugal (FAUP), in collaboration with the publishing imprint scopio Editions.

About Sophia Journal

Sophia Journal explores the specific potential of the physical book as a unique medium to communicate the theoretical papers and visual essays that are published, which adds to its uniqueness. As a result of the significant collaboration between authors, editors and designers and a judicious selection and juxtaposition of images and text, combined with thoughtful layout and design, it was possible to create a visual narrative where the sum is greater than the parts, which we believe has as a result an innovative reading and a more insightful understanding about architecture through photography.

Sophia Journal adopts standard academic publication procedures, nevertheless it is not limited to traditional academic papers but also includes visual essays that are the result of practice-based research. This means that we are interested in traditional papers, where the incidence is the mode of writing that uses predominatly text, which may or may not be combined with images, as well as in the visual essay format, which allows more freedom and in which discourse takes place predominantly through images.

The visual essay format allows authors to combine in innovative ways text and image, creating space for practice research and in this way challenging the dominance of writing in academic research. We encourage the submission of work exploring visual strategies which are able to integrate technical and artistic aspects by using imagery, namely photography, as a mental device that leads to a new perception of architecture, space and their experiences.

 About the concept “landscapes of care”

The concept “landscapes of care” has increasingly been adopted by diverse areas of study coming from health geography to the arts and architecture. Taking this notion to the universe of architecture we would like to understand architecture, city and territory as living and inclusive organisms, constituted by multifaceted landscapes with complex social and organisational spatialities which embody the difference and the other, the strange, the unfamiliar, the indigenous, the human and the non-human.

In the present volume 7 of Sophia Journal and first of this 3rd cycle - the emergence of landscapes of care in extreme territories - we addressed the emergence of "landscapes of care" in unstable territories. The focus was on the emergence of landscapes of care in unstable territories, which could comprise diverse situations and territories, as explained in its call. This volume has  brought  together  a  diverse  group  of  researchers,  architects,  visual  artists,  and  curators,  gathered  in  this  publication  and  its  International  Conference  in  an  exercise  of  joint  reflexivity  around  different  perspectives  and  visual  constructs  calling  our  attention  to  territories  that  need  critical  care.  Thus,  while  not  really  proposing  new  design  solutions  for  those  territories,  the theoretical papers and visual essays do address their problems giving valuable information and  perspectives  that  can  feed  differentiated  design  interventions  and  programmes  aiming  to  repair, protect and help to re-establish the identity and configuration of those territories which for diverse reasons suffered severe changes.

More information in: 

Sophia Journal platform: www.up.pt/revistas/index.php/sophia
Sophia Journal Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/sophia.journal0/
Sophia jornal instagram: https://www.instagram.com/sophia_journal_/

Research group:  Architecture, Arte and Image — AAI CEAU.FAUP