Contenu du sommaire : L'architecture rurale : questions d'esthétique

Revue Etudes rurales Mir@bel
Numéro no 117, 1990
Titre du numéro L'architecture rurale : questions d'esthétique
Texte intégral en ligne Accessible sur l'internet
  • L'architecture sans architectes : une esthétique involontaire ? - Françoise Dubost, Isac Chiva p. 9-38 accès libre avec résumé en anglais
    Architecture without architects : an unvoluntary aesthetics ? The problem of the aesthetics of rural architecture has been handled, or covered up, in various ways by specialists in their analyses, typologies and inventory procedures, as well as in the practical applications of their research. Various disciplines have treated this topic differently depending on their conceptual approaches and methods as well as their social and institutional histories. In this respect, it is telling to compare what ethnologists, art historians and architects have to say.
  • L'utile et l'agréable. La question de l'esthétique dans l'enquête d'architecture rurale du musée national des Arts et Traditions Populaires (1943-1947) - Philippe Bonnin p. 39-72 accès libre avec résumé en anglais
    The useful and the pleasant : the question of aesthetics in the survey of rural architecture conducted by the Musée National des Arts et Traditions Populaires (1943-1947) A policy for protecting rural architecture and landscapes developed out of a survey conducted by Georges-Henri Rivière for the Musée National des Arts et Traditions Populaires from 1943 to 1947. Besides soliciting monographs, this survey sought to discern the decorative elements and distinguish the functional from the aesthetic. Using cases observed in the Margeride and Aubrac areas of France, this article examines this survey's results, the shortcomings of the grid used for analysis, and the position as an expert that was filled by those who conducted the survey. This survey's problems are explained by going back to Riviere's comments both on the nostalgia for a golden age and on the functionalist theories dominant at that time. A more open approach to aesthetic analysis is proposed that calls for taking into account the observer's subjectivity and knowledge of local architectural systems. Thus can be understood the relative coherence of value systems and of the practices of an agricultural, or rural, way of life, even in contemporary forms.
  • La maison et l'esthétique paysanne dans les monts du Lyonnais - Michel Rautenberg p. 73-84 accès libre avec résumé en anglais
    Peasant houses and aesthetics in the Lyon mountain area In the mountains to the west of Lyon, France, the style of farms (two opposite buildings joined by an open shed to form a square farmyard closed by a high wall) gradually developed from the late 18th till the early 19th century. This major architectural evolution occurred along with a transformation of farming practices and society. Aesthetic choices were produced by a cultural system where social practices were being uniformized, family strategies were rooted in the land, and there was a concern for protecting the household world. Through the choices of the builders of these farms, aesthetics can be understood as a reserve of meaning for expressing the dialectics of the particular and the general, of the intimate and the ostentatious, of the private and public realms.
  • Modes et modèles : les maisons à arcades du Nord des Hautes-Alpes - Marie-Pascale Mallé p. 85-102 accès libre avec résumé en anglais
    Styles and models : houses with archways in the northern Hautes-Alpes department Houses with archways are thought to be typical of the Vallouise Valley, France, even though they represent a small proportion of houses there and are found elsewhere too. The only feature that distinguishes them from other houses in Vallouise is the facade. All houses have the same structure, interior distribution of space and system of circulation. The archways on the facade thus seem to be a deliberate embellishment independent of a house's internal layout. This style of house was adopted during the second half of the 18th century by well-off farmers and local officials, who chose it out of a stock of forms that was neither typically rural nor specifically Alpine.
  • Recherche et méthodes

    • Esthétique, architecture et environnement montagnard. Nouveaux outils, nouveaux symboles - Michel Barrué, Monique Barrué-Pastor p. 103-117 accès libre avec résumé en anglais
      Aesthetics, architecture and the mountain environment : new tools, new symbols This attempt to reassess the relations between architecture, society and environment has come out of the construction of new buildings for livestock in a touristic zone protected under the French law on historical monuments. In this experimental research action project, the decision to link theory and practice (and thus break the narrow relationship usually established between aesthetics, nature and nostalgia) had to do with the idea that modernity does not necessarily break with the past. Two notions that shaped this analysis (integrated local development and architecture's aesthetic dimension) were defined by their capacity for taking into account a place, society and history. As operational concepts, they could be used to link "development" with "protection" so as to avoid the "conservationist" approach, which often shapes issues and perceptions of the mountain environment.
  • Témoignage

    • L'Assistance architecturale dans le Lot (1969-1980) et la protection du paysage - Robert Joly p. 119-126 accès libre avec résumé en anglais
      Architectural Assistance in Lot Department (1969-1980), and protecting the landscape Under Architectural Assistance, a pilot project limited to a few French departments, a small group of architects was sent to the countryside to contend with problems such as the deterioration of old houses and the "holes" punched in the rural fabric by housing developments. The problems faced in Lot department 20 years ago, as well as the experimental solutions, are still of interest. How to reconcile modernization and the conservation of old houses ? How to make the public sensitive to this issue ? How to preserve traditional know-how ? How to inform and educate professionals ?
  • Chronique scientifique

  • varia

    • Les biens communaux du Briançonnais aux XVIIIe et XIXe siècles - Nadine Vivier p. 139-158 accès libre avec résumé en anglais
      Communal property in the Briangon area during the 18th and 19th centuries The Briançon area in the Alps managed to keep 80% of its land as property of the communes, whereas, everywhere else in France during the 18th and 19th centuries, the collective use of land declined or vanished. This resistance apparently had to do with : the strong cohesion of rural communities made up of small landowners ; the latter's attachment to using land collectively for their herds ; widespread literacy ; and an openness toward the outside world, which has made communities dynamic and apt to defend themselves.
    • La chaise, la vache et la charrue. Les ventes aux enchères volontaires dans les exploitations agricoles - Jacques Rémy p. 159-177 accès libre avec résumé en anglais
      Chairs, cows and the plow : voluntary auctions on farms When farmers retire in areas of western France where tenant farming is practised (as in Perche), they often auction off their herds, furniture, machines, tools, etc. This social event has economic, festive, ceremonial and ritual aspects, in particular as a rite of passage from farming to retirement. For the farm couple, it is the way to obtain the most value from its goods and thus increase its means of livelihood for retirement or even buy a house in town. Such a voluntary sale may also be used by the tenant farmer to show up his landlord. The auctioneering process sheds light on the diversity of social group's value systems, as can be seen through reactions to the prices that certain objects (in particular "antiques") fetch.
    • Le qat, planche de salut ou cancer de l'économie yéménite ? - Blandine Destremau p. 179-190 accès libre avec résumé en anglais
      Khat, a source of salvation or of cancer for Yemen's economy ? Especially since the 1960s and 1970s, when the number of emigrants sending earnings back home increased sharply, khat has become important in North Yemen's economy. Nearly half the population consumes it, nearly a third of farmers grow it - on the best land. By accounting for nearly a quarter of the income in rural areas, khat finances social infrastructures, hydraulic systems and transportation, and provides jobs for poor peasants. This Bmild" narcotic has its defenders in high places even though it is officially considered to be a bane. Replacing it calls for adopting other crops and developing other, profitable economic activities.
  • Résumés/Abstracts - p. 191-198 accès libre
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