Since the early 1990s, literary reflection as a  component of the architectural discourse has disappeared into the  background. In a favourable economic and political climate, those  working within the Dutch world of architecture had plenty of other  things to keep them occupied. The architectural vanguard in the  Netherlands, now known as 'SuperDutch', scored successes without any  cause for reflection.
 
        Since the early 1990s, literary reflection as a  component of the architectural discourse has disappeared into the  background. In a favourable economic and political climate, those  working within the Dutch world of architecture had plenty of other  things to keep them occupied. The architectural vanguard in the  Netherlands, now known as 'SuperDutch', scored successes without any  cause for reflection.
Now that the boom of the SuperDutch era is past its peak (see OASE 67 - After the Party),  encounters between different artistic disciplines are once again being  employed in a process of reciprocal exchange. Literature not only  provides descriptions of a reality, but also opens up new perspectives.
In this issue of OASE, areas discussed  include the (auto-) biographical novel, in which highly personal  descriptions and narratives challenge us to look at architecture in a  different way and what literary reflection can represent for  architectural practice.