In fact, the notion is actually the reverse from what people thought. “The Poor Rich Man” by Adolf Loos illustrates the life of a newly rich man living in a house. The house was furnished and the owner’s clothes were designed by a designer, who also defined where should he use each of the apparels throughout his house. For the designer, there was no reason to change or add new objects. This story aims to show that the Secession houses were like a sarcophagus because life was coagulated in the perfection of an immutable moment. The owner of that house represented his new position of a wealthy man, his “new identity”. Nonetheless, a person’s life is about change and his or her identity adjusts correspondingly. Identity is continuous and changing (Zarzar 2007, para. …show more content…
An identity of resistance is able to transform over the years into a political and institutional power in society. There will be still changes linked to political, social, and economic matters wherever people manage normally in daily life; and transforms the physical environment itself (Zarzar 2007, para. 10). The process is by classifying and comparing the people’s characteristics, cities, objects and so on. Sudden changes in the surroundings are part of a new identity. If a city loses its current identity, it is forming a new one concurrently(Zarzar 2007, para.