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Claude Parent is a utopian modernist French architect, and creator (with Paul Virilio) of the theory of oblique architecture, or the theory of the function of the oblique. He has been a polemicist, writer and self-publicist extraordinaire and professional architect for more than sixty years. His partnership with Paul Virilio, the self-styled “critic of the art of technology,” their work on oblique architecture from 1963-1969 and its implications for Parent’s theory of critical modernity, are the main subject of this essay.
Steve Redhead (Thu,) studied this question.