Domestic architecture of the modern-day elites : manifestations of periodic change in home environments

dc.contributor.authorWijetunge, MNR
dc.date.accessioned2019-02-26T19:32:10Z
dc.date.available2019-02-26T19:32:10Z
dc.description.abstractVarious aspects of elitism, elite life, culture, and their design traditions have all been undertaken and discerned largely by Western scholars over time. Hence, in addressing this seminal topic, such a body of knowledge becomes indispensable, although it is somewhat oblivious to an Eastern perspective. Since 15th century, these propagations have been ensued all over the modern world with the aid of wide-spread Iberian and Western European colonial practices as McGillivray (2006: 15-19) tells us. In the rapidly globalizing and predominantly capitalist modern world, elites are conveniently placed on top of the social hierarchy irrespective of their physical location. In this context, the paper attempts to explore the underlying reasons for this immutable condition. As its foremost contribution, the apparent sensitiveness of elites to periodic changes in society is to be investigated, while establishing what these are in actuality. In this exercise, how essential aspects of'high culture' and 'grand design tradition' are bound to the elite dwelling - with its contiguity to the complex notions of 'home' - is dealt with, identifying their inter-relations.en_US
dc.identifier.issueno. 04en_US
dc.identifier.journalJournal of the International Society for the Study of Vernacular Settlementsen_US
dc.identifier.pgnospp. 54 - 70en_US
dc.identifier.urihttp://dl.lib.mrt.ac.lk/handle/123/14000
dc.identifier.volumevol. 02en_US
dc.identifier.year2013en_US
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.subjectElitism, domestic architecture, periodic changeen_US
dc.titleDomestic architecture of the modern-day elites : manifestations of periodic change in home environmentsen_US
dc.typeArticle-Abstracten_US

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