Fifty years ago, the towers fell. Two miles north of the gleaming steel of the then-still-new Gateway Arch in St. Louis, the Pruitt-Igoe public housing development had been a triumph of Modernist design when it was completed in 1954. Initially racially separated, by 1955 the 33 11-storey towers were racially integrated and white residents began relocating to other parts of the expanding suburban area. Between 1972 and 1976 the now-neglected and derelict buildings were demolished. The 57-acre campus was left untended for decades, allowing native vegetation to reclaim this section of the urban landscape. In November 2019, the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, broke ground on its new $2B campus in north St. Louis. The new home for the US intelligence agency that specializes in mapping, surveillance, and satellite imagery is across the street from the ruins of Pruitt-Igoe. Both building projects on this site contributed to histories and legacies of design and displacement that played out in innumerable urban contexts across the United States over the past half century.
By forefronting the crossroads of design, public policy, surveillance, disinvestment, and lived experience, this conference seeks to bring together scholars from across the humanities, social sciences, critical GIS, urban design, architecture, art, and adjacent fields to examine questions of visual representation, symbolic appropriation, space, and place. Pruitt-Igoe’s design and decay provides one touchpoint to consider the intersections of critical GIScience and spatial humanities, including analyses of architecture, city planning, community organizing, urban renewal, cultural histories and ethnographies, among other modes of mapping and inhabiting place.
We are especially interested in papers and panels that examine Pruitt-Igoe in its historical and cultural contexts, broadly considered; the introduction of the NGA to the urban landscape and/or its domestic and international operations; the lived experiences of space and place, with particular attention to religion, race, and gender; the contributions of critical GIS to studies of migration, settlement, and displacement; technologies of visual representation as they relate to the formation of social and cultural boundaries; and the role of maps and mapmakers in creating and sustaining systems of segregation. Other related topics will also be considered.
The conference will be held on the campus of Saint Louis University in St. Louis, Missouri, on April 3-5, 2025. We encourage submissions from advanced graduate students, independent scholars, and university faculty of all ranks and status.
Funding for this conference has been provided by the Center on Lived Religion, the Center for Culture, Religion, Engineering, Science, and Technology, the Spatial Humanities Initiative of the Taylor Geospatial Institute, the Henry Luce Foundation, and the College of Arts and Sciences at Saint Louis University.
More details on the proposal process can be found by following the Submit Proposal links on this page.
Limited funding for travel and accommodations available.
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30 September 2024