Domestic Hybrids: Vitruvius’ Xenia, the Surrealist’s Minotaure, and Shrigley’s Octopus

Open Philosophy 6 (1) (2023)
  Copy   BIBTEX

Abstract

The domestic spaces of the built environment are traditionally associated with residential architecture. But the domestic spaces can also extend out, metaphorically, into familiar public spaces in which one may feel at home, and also extend inwards into self-perception, insofar as you may say that you dwell within yourself. This article begins by recalling Vitruvius’ fundamental notion of architectural utilitas concerns accommodating not a building’s owners but foreigners and strange outsiders. Vitruvius’ view on utility heavily favoured architecture’s socio-political function, and the guests he believed that architecture ought to accommodate were not merely a home’s owners or their visiting friends, but those people who are more distant from a home’s owners: those who are stranger and less well understood, known as xenos and who ought to be respected under the Ancient Greek religious and ethical principle of xenia. It is on these grounds that Vitruvius makes an ethical critique of residential architecture in favour of the virtue of public architecture. Next the reach of xenia is proposed to extend towards those who are different not merely because of ethnic differences but cognitive and sensory differences. Such accommodations are today accounted for as part of accessibility design and salutogenic design. Similar conceptions are noted in Nietzsche’s notion of an “architecture for the perceptive” and the surrealist’s interpretation of the minotaur as a hybrid not only of animal and human but a hybrid of civilised citizen and barbarian outsider. Together these sketch out an expanded sense of the domestic that includes public spaces designed to accommodate strange outsiders and the hybrid forms used to signify them.

Other Versions

No versions found

Links

PhilArchive



    Upload a copy of this work     Papers currently archived: 99,576

External links

Setup an account with your affiliations in order to access resources via your University's proxy server

Through your library

Similar books and articles

The Architecture of M. Vitruvius. Pollio.W. Vitruvius Pollio & Newton - 1771 - Printed by William Griffin, and John Clark, and Published by J. Dodsley ... Printed for I. And J. Taylor ... R. Faulder ... P. Elmsly ... And T. Sewell ..
Ethics and Architecture.Tom Elliott Spector - 2000 - Dissertation, University of California, Berkeley
Non casas, sed etiam domos fundatas: the origins of architecture from Vitruvius.Leandro Manenti - 2023 - Archai: Revista de Estudos Sobre as Origens Do Pensamento Ocidental 33:03326-03326.
Vitruvius. [REVIEW]Carroll William Westfall - 2004 - Review of Metaphysics 58 (2):458-460.
Vitruvius on Architecture, IX.Hugh Plommer - 1970 - The Classical Review 20 (03):349-.

Analytics

Added to PP
n/a

Downloads
28 (#678,632)

6 months
6 (#694,549)

Historical graph of downloads
How can I increase my downloads?

Author's Profile

Simon Weir
University of Sydney

Citations of this work

No citations found.

Add more citations

References found in this work

Politics: Books V and Vi.David Aristotle Keyt (ed.) - 1999 - Cambridge, Mass.: Oxford University Press UK.
Neurodiversity, epistemic injustice, and the good human life.Robert Chapman & Havi Carel - 2022 - Journal of Social Philosophy 53 (4):614-631.
P.Oxy. 2331 and Others.D. L. Page - 1957 - The Classical Review 7 (3-4):189-192.
Provincial Languages in the Roman Empire.Ramsay MacMullen - 1966 - American Journal of Philology 87 (1):1.

Add more references