
New Books Network Jessica Kelly and Neal Shasore, "Reconstruction: Architecture, Society and the Aftermath of the First World War" (Bloomsbury, 2024)
Jan 7, 2026
Jessica Kelly and Neal Shasore, both architectural historians and co-editors of the book 'Reconstruction,' delve into the impact of the First World War on British architecture. They discuss the significance of the interwar period, overlooked in much historical analysis, and explore the diverse architectural styles emerging from this era. The conversation emphasizes the role of community and social structures in architecture, alongside the importance of expanding the narrative beyond just architects. They also touch on their future research endeavors that continue to unpack these themes.
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Rethink The Interwar Bookends
- The First World War shouldn't be a simple historical bookend for British architectural change.
- Recasting interwar years reveals nuanced continuities and broader cultural contexts for architecture.
From Symposium To Five-Year Book Project
- Neal organized a 2018 symposium that sparked the book and invited wide-ranging papers on reconstruction.
- He then recruited Jessica and turned the symposium output into a five-year edited volume project.
Architecture As Process And Evidence
- Architecture should be studied as processes involving many actors not just buildings or star architects.
- Treating plans, real estate, specification and inhabitation as historical evidence opens new analytic routes.

