Das Deutsche Haus in Seiner Historischen Entwickelung

Das Deutsche Haus in Seiner Historischen Entwickelung
Author: Rudolf Henning
Publisher: Palala Press
Total Pages:
Release: 2016-05-23
Genre:
ISBN: 9781358780486

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The architecture of social reform

The architecture of social reform
Author: Isabel Rousset
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Total Pages: 351
Release: 2022-06-07
Genre: Architecture
ISBN: 1526159678

The architecture of social reform explores the fascinating intellectual origins of modern architecture’s obsession with domesticity. Copiously illustrated, Rousset’s revealing analysis demonstrates how questions over aesthetics, style, urbanization, and technology that gripped the modernist imagination were deeply ingrained in a larger concern to reform society through housing. The increasing demand for new housing in Germany’s rapidly growing cities fostered critical exchanges between a heterogeneous group of actors, including architects, urban theorists, planners, and social scientists, who called for society to be freed from class antagonism through the provision of good, modest, traditionally-minded domestic design. Offering a compelling account of architecture’s ability to act socially, the book provocatively argues that architectural theory underwent its most critical epistemological transformation in relation to the dynamics of modern class politics long before the arrival of the avant-garde.

The Earth That Modernism Built

The Earth That Modernism Built
Author: Kenny Cupers
Publisher: University of Texas Press
Total Pages: 471
Release: 2024-11-26
Genre: Architecture
ISBN: 1477329838

An intellectual history of architectural modernism for an age of rising global inequality and environmental crisis. The Earth That Modernism Built traces the rise of planetary design to an imperialist discourse about the influence of the earthly environment on humanity. Kenny Cupers argues that to understand how the earth became an object of design, we need to radically shift the terms of analysis. Rather than describing how new design ideas and practices traveled and transformed people and places across the globe, this book interrogates the politics of life and earth underpinning this process. It demonstrates how approaches to modern housing, landscape design, and infrastructure planning are indebted to an understanding of planetary and human ecology fueled by settler colonialism and imperial ambition. Cupers draws from both canonical and unknown sources and archives in Germany, Namibia, and Poland to situate Wilhelmine and Weimar design projects in an expansive discourse about the relationship between soil, settlement, and race. This reframing reveals connections between colonial officials planning agricultural hinterlands, garden designers proselytizing geopolitical theory, soil researchers turning to folklore, and Bauhaus architects designing modern communities according to functionalist principles. Ultimately, The Earth That Modernism Built shows how the conviction that we can design our way out of environmental crisis is bound to exploitative and divisive ways of inhabiting the earth.

The Old English Manor

The Old English Manor
Author: Charles McLean Andrews
Publisher: Baltimore, Md. : Johns Hopkins Press
Total Pages: 314
Release: 1892
Genre: Feudalism
ISBN: