CAT 2019 Slot 1 — VARC Question 24
Answer the following questions based on the information given below.
As defined by the geographer Yi-Fu Tuan, topophilia is the affective bond between people and place. His 1974 book set forth a wide-ranging exploration of how the emotive ties with the material environment vary greatly from person to person and in intensity, subtlety, and mode of expression. Factors influencing one’s depth of response to the environment include cultural background, gender, race, and historical circumstance, and Tuan also argued that there is a biological and sensory element. Topophilia might not be the strongest of human emotions— indeed, many people feel utterly indifferent toward the environments that shape their lives— but when activated it has the power to elevate a place to become the carrier of emotionally charged events or to be perceived as a symbol.
Aesthetic appreciation is one way in which people respond to the environment. A brilliantly colored rainbow after gloomy afternoon showers, a busy city street alive with human interaction—one might experience the beauty of such landscapes that had seemed quite ordinary only moments before or that are being newly discovered. This is quite the opposite of a second topophilic bond, namely that of the acquired taste for certain landscapes and places that one knows well. When a place is home, or when a space has become the locus of memories or the means of gaining a livelihood, it frequently evokes a deeper set of attachments than those predicated purely on the visual. A third response to the environment also depends on the human senses but may be tactile and olfactory, namely a delight in the feel and smell of air, water, and the earth.
Topophilia—and its very close conceptual twin, sense of place—is an experience that, however elusive, has inspired recent architects and planners. Most notably, new urbanism seeks to counter the perceived placelessness of modern suburbs and the decline of central cities through neo-traditional design motifs. Although motivated by good intentions, such attempts to create places rich in meaning are perhaps bound to disappoint. As Tuan noted, purely aesthetic responses often are suddenly revealed, but their intensity rarely is longlasting. Topophilia is difficult to design for and impossible to quantify, and its most articulate interpreters have been self-reflective philosophers such as Henry David Thoreau, evoking a marvelously intricate sense of place at Walden Pond, and Tuan, describing his deep affinity for the desert.
Topophilia connotes a positive relationship, but it often is useful to explore the darker affiliations between people and place. Patriotism, literally meaning the love of one’s terra patria or homeland, has long been cultivated by governing elites for a range of nationalist projects, including war preparation and ethnic cleansing. Residents of upscale residential developments have disclosed how important it is to maintain their community’s distinct identity, often by casting themselves in a superior social position and by reinforcing class and racial differences. And just as a beloved landscape is suddenly revealed, so too may landscapes of fear cast a dark shadow over a place that makes one feel a sense of dread or anxiety—or topophobia.
Which one of the following best captures the meaning of the statement, “Topophilia is difficult to design for and impossible to quantify . . .”?
Answer & solution
- A
Architects have to objectively quantify spaces and hence cannot be topophilic.
- B
The deep anomie of modern urbanisation led to new urbanism’s intricate sense of place.
- C
Philosopher-architects are uniquely suited to develop topophilic design.
People’s responses to their environment are usually subjective and so cannot be rendered in design.
Easy
Unpack the statement "Topophilia is difficult to design for and impossible to quantify." The passage explains why: emotive ties "vary greatly from person to person," aesthetic responses are fleeting, and topophilia is "difficult to design for." So the bond is subjective and personal, hence resistant to deliberate design and measurement. Find the option that captures this subjectivity-defeats-design idea.
Architects must objectively quantify space and so cannot be topophilic. The statement is about the difficulty of designing/measuring the bond, not about architects being incapable of feeling it. Misreads the claim. Wrong.
Anomie of urbanisation led to new urbanism's intricate sense of place. The passage says new urbanism's attempts are "bound to disappoint"; it does not credit them with an "intricate sense of place." Off-point. Wrong.
Philosopher-architects are uniquely suited to topophilic design. The passage names philosophers (Thoreau, Tuan) as articulate interpreters of place, not as designers, and stresses topophilia is hard to design at all. Wrong.
Responses to environment are subjective and so cannot be rendered in design. Correct. Because topophilia varies person to person and is impossible to quantify, it is subjective and therefore resists being engineered into a design — exactly the meaning of the quoted statement.
Answer: Option D — people's responses to their environment are subjective and thus cannot be reliably captured or rendered in design.