The Gothic Revival is a complex phenomenon in British design that encompassed architecture, garden design, literature and aesthetics. From Shakespeare's history plays to the country houses of Horace Walpole and William Beckford, and from the self-taught architect Sarah Losh to the professional builders and architects of the Oxbridge colleges, referencing the medieval and Tudor periods is a distinctive feature of British architecture which involved many quirky personalities and outright eccentrics in terms of both architects and patrons.
This course examines the impact of historical consciousness on British architecture from the sixteenth through the nineteenth centuries. The architecture of Oxford's colleges offers a number of examples of self-conscious historicism, from Christ Church to Keble. In addition to weekly lectures, one week will be devoted to a walking tour of relevant buildings in Oxford. There will be a final paper in which students will delve more deeply into a case study of their choice.