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María González Pendás

  • Assistant Professor
  • Interim Coordinator of the HAUD Ph.D. Program

Department

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Academic Research Areas

  • Architectural history
  • Architectural theory
  • Public humanities
  • Iberian, Latin American, and decolonial studies
  • Global fascism and critiques of ideology
  • Politics of religion and secularism
  • Labor history
  • History and politics of sciences and technology

María González Pendás is an architectural historian of modernity and coloniality of the Spanish transatlantic world whose research explores the intersections of aesthetics, technologies, ideologies, and power through the built environment. Her current book manuscript, Holy Modern: Technocracy, Theocracy and the Architectures of Hispanic Fascism, studies the architectural workings of fascism, technocracy, and the imperial figment of Hispanidad in the second postwar and through the lens of Spain. Other projects have investigated relations of labor and race in México; the coloniality of concrete technologies and innovation across the South Atlantic; and the relationship between technology, religion, and secularism in global modernity.

González Pendás has received grants and fellowships from the Society of Architectural Historians, the Graham Foundation, and the Fulbright Foundation, among others, and was a member of Columbia University’s Society of Fellows in the Humanities from 2016–19. She received her Ph.D. in Architecture History and Theory from Columbia University and her Masters in Architecture from the Polytechnic University in Madrid. Prior to joining Cornell, she taught at Vassar College, The Cooper Union, and the Art History Department at Columbia University, where she also coordinated the public humanities initiative of the SOF/Heyman Center for the Humanities to promote civically engaged forms of scholarship and pedagogy.

A woman with long brown hair

Academic Research Areas

  • Architectural history
  • Architectural theory
  • Public humanities
  • Iberian, Latin American, and decolonial studies
  • Global fascism and critiques of ideology
  • Politics of religion and secularism
  • Labor history
  • History and politics of sciences and technology

Classes

  • Seminar in Special Topics in the History of Architecture and Urbanism

    ARCH 6819

  • History of Architecture II

    ARCH 1802/5802

Selected Awards, Grants, and Fellowships

  • Provost's Addressing Racism Seed Grant Initiative

    Office of the Vice Provost for Faculty Advancement, Columbia University, 2021

  • De Montêquin Senior Scholar Research Fellowship

    Society of Architectural Historians, 2020

  • Society of Fellows in the Humanities

    Mellon Postdoctoral Fellowship, Columbia University, 2016–19

  • Carter Manny Award

    Citation of Special Recognition, Graham Foundation, 2012

  • Fulbright Fellowship

    2006

Selected Exhibitions and Presentations

  • "Imperial Abstractions: Architecture and the Technoaesthetics of Postwar Fascism"

    Colloquium Series, Program in the History of Science and Technology, University of Minnesota, 2020

  • "Site as Lab: Displacing Risk in Concrete Modernities"

    Taubman College, University of Michigan, 2019

  • "Holy Modern: East, West, and the Constructs of Empire in Fascist Spain"

    Collins/Kaufmann Forum, Department of Art History and Archeology, Columbia University, 2018