M.I.celium mexicanus: Rejecting Modernity through Zapotec Futurism

[M.I.]celium mexicanus is an entry point for architects and humans to consider transforming their relationship to the Earth’s critical zone through reconciliation with mushrooms to cultivate fungal allyship. The thesis examines and reimagines a future of building that drives towards the biological v...

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Main Author: Torres, Lynced Angelica
Other Authors: Kennedy, Sheila
Format: Thesis
Published: Massachusetts Institute of Technology 2022
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/138958
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author Torres, Lynced Angelica
author2 Kennedy, Sheila
author_facet Kennedy, Sheila
Torres, Lynced Angelica
author_sort Torres, Lynced Angelica
collection MIT
description [M.I.]celium mexicanus is an entry point for architects and humans to consider transforming their relationship to the Earth’s critical zone through reconciliation with mushrooms to cultivate fungal allyship. The thesis examines and reimagines a future of building that drives towards the biological vs. that which is mineralized and controlled through unempathetic forces such as extraction through mining, greenwashing renewable energy to sustain mining production, and commercialization of architecture and planning practices. These elements are contaminants in the culture and lives of the Zapotec community residing in Juchitan, Oaxaca and perpetuate a historical system of colonisation and exploitation by not only foreign powers, but their own country and people. The city itself currently as of 2021 has not completely been able to rebuild the damage faced in the event of the 2017 hurricane that struck in the southern coast of the Isthmus de Tehuantepec. Government aid is minimal and services towards westernized modular building units like the concrete block, which are not ideal given the hot climate, serve as a unitized symbol for economic status, and is also susceptible to destruction. The house and temple of the future embeds all the ideals, values, and ACTIONS that it may collectively take to revitalize the very soil and territory that offers itself as a substrate for life. The actions reflect and respect the rituals of the “The People” as they are no longer considered inhabitants of the past, incapable of appreciating and forging technology for the modern world. Rather, in an act of architectural and environmental anarchy, they guide the future away from extraction and towards circular economies through their collective wisdom of the past, experience in the survival of countless apocalypses, and with their close ties to mushrooms.
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spelling mit-1721.1/1389582022-01-15T03:45:02Z M.I.celium mexicanus: Rejecting Modernity through Zapotec Futurism Torres, Lynced Angelica Kennedy, Sheila Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Architecture [M.I.]celium mexicanus is an entry point for architects and humans to consider transforming their relationship to the Earth’s critical zone through reconciliation with mushrooms to cultivate fungal allyship. The thesis examines and reimagines a future of building that drives towards the biological vs. that which is mineralized and controlled through unempathetic forces such as extraction through mining, greenwashing renewable energy to sustain mining production, and commercialization of architecture and planning practices. These elements are contaminants in the culture and lives of the Zapotec community residing in Juchitan, Oaxaca and perpetuate a historical system of colonisation and exploitation by not only foreign powers, but their own country and people. The city itself currently as of 2021 has not completely been able to rebuild the damage faced in the event of the 2017 hurricane that struck in the southern coast of the Isthmus de Tehuantepec. Government aid is minimal and services towards westernized modular building units like the concrete block, which are not ideal given the hot climate, serve as a unitized symbol for economic status, and is also susceptible to destruction. The house and temple of the future embeds all the ideals, values, and ACTIONS that it may collectively take to revitalize the very soil and territory that offers itself as a substrate for life. The actions reflect and respect the rituals of the “The People” as they are no longer considered inhabitants of the past, incapable of appreciating and forging technology for the modern world. Rather, in an act of architectural and environmental anarchy, they guide the future away from extraction and towards circular economies through their collective wisdom of the past, experience in the survival of countless apocalypses, and with their close ties to mushrooms. M.Arch. 2022-01-14T14:40:50Z 2022-01-14T14:40:50Z 2021-06 2021-07-27T20:22:20.865Z Thesis https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/138958 In Copyright - Educational Use Permitted Copyright retained by author(s) https://rightsstatements.org/page/InC-EDU/1.0/ application/pdf Massachusetts Institute of Technology
spellingShingle Torres, Lynced Angelica
M.I.celium mexicanus: Rejecting Modernity through Zapotec Futurism
title M.I.celium mexicanus: Rejecting Modernity through Zapotec Futurism
title_full M.I.celium mexicanus: Rejecting Modernity through Zapotec Futurism
title_fullStr M.I.celium mexicanus: Rejecting Modernity through Zapotec Futurism
title_full_unstemmed M.I.celium mexicanus: Rejecting Modernity through Zapotec Futurism
title_short M.I.celium mexicanus: Rejecting Modernity through Zapotec Futurism
title_sort m i celium mexicanus rejecting modernity through zapotec futurism
url https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/138958
work_keys_str_mv AT torreslyncedangelica miceliummexicanusrejectingmodernitythroughzapotecfuturism