Selected Product: | Rethinking Architecture: Reader in Cultural Theory Paperback Edition: 1 Author: Neil Leach Publisher: Routledge Release Date: 1997-03-21 ISBN-10: 0415128269 ISBN-13: 9780415128261 List Price: $45.00 Average Customer Rating: | | Architecture Theory since 1968 ISBN-10: 0262581884 ISBN-13: 9780262581882 List Price:$46.00 Programs and Manifestoes on 20th-Century Architecture ISBN-10: 0262530309 ISBN-13: 9780262530309 List Price:$21.95 Learning from Las Vegas - Revised Edition: The Forgotten Symbolism of Architectural Form ISBN-10: 026272006X ISBN-13: 9780262720069 List Price:$23.95 Theorizing a New Agenda for Architecture:: An Anthology of Architectural Theory 1965 - 1995 ISBN-10: 156898054X ISBN-13: 9781568980546 List Price:$45.00 Studies in Tectonic Culture: The Poetics of Construction in Nineteenth and Twentieth Century Architecture ISBN-10: 0262561492 ISBN-13: 9780262561495 List Price:$42.00 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Rethinking Architecture: Reader in Cultural Theory by Neil Leach (ISBN-10: 0415128269, ISBN-13: 9780415128261). At this time we have not yet written a review for Rethinking Architecture: Reader in Cultural Theory by Neil Leach (ISBN-10: 0415128269, ISBN-13: 9780415128261). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com Rethinking Architecture offers a refreshing take on the statement of architecture -- what we mean by what we build. Brought together for the first time, this collection of core writings on architecture by many of the key philosophers and cultural theorists of the twentieth century reconsiders many of the accepted tenets of architectural theory from a broader cultural perspective. Rethinking Architecture represents a careful selection of the very best theoretical writings on the ideas which have shaped our cities and our experiences around architecture. Neil Leach lays out five sections composing the predominant schools of twentieth century thought. Sectional introductions link important ideas and themes, and surveys of the lives and works of each theorist preface their writings. A great sourcebook | Customer Rating: | | The editor of the books is to be congratulated for compiling all the key texts of the leading Continental philosophers on the topics of architecture, urbanism, or the built environment per se. Whether or not you are smitten by the so-called Continental philosophy -- a loosely connected group of twentieth century figures mostly active in Germany and France, from Heidegger and Adorno through Foucault and Derrida -- you can't deny that they have decisively influenced the contemporary architectural discourse. It's useful to have most of the relevant writings available in one volume. | solid choice of readings | Customer Rating: | | Contrary to the opinion of the fellow who gave this book 1 star, this book has an excellent selection of essays from many key 20th century thinkers (including three essays and 1 extract from Heidegger, which should be enough to undermine the critic's credibility). For the most part, they are presented unedited in full. Many of the selections are must-reads for people who wish to understand particular periods in the history of modern architecture, and it is nice to have them all together under a single cover. | Mis-reading architecture | Customer Rating: | | I read this book and was instantly struck by the mis-representation and editing of the theories of some of the centuries most important thinkers. The discourse is limited to a one-dimensional view of architectural theory that seems to dismiss the most potent ideas of critical theory and radical critique. The book is structured around themed chapters containing several extracts with a logic of "this is a critique of this" in a rather naive way. The author's ommission of Heidegger's thinking is bizarre and his critique of Loos misses out the crucial influence of the intellectual milieu of early 20th century Vienna (Kraus, Wittgenstein etc.). Some interesting lesser known figures are brought to light (Kracauer for example)and there is some fantastic material here extracted from larger works, but be warned! this is a book with its own agenda. | Mis-reading architecture | Customer Rating: | | I read this book and was instantly struck by the mis-representation and editing of the theories of some of the centuries most important thinkers. The discourse is limited to a one-dimensional view of architectural theory that seems to dismiss the most potent ideas of critical theory and radical critique. The book is structured around themed chapters containing several extracts with a logic of "this is a critique of this" in a rather naive way. The author's ommission of Heidegger's thinking is bizarre and his critique of Loos misses out the crucial influence of the intellectual milieu of early 20th century Vienna (Kraus, Wittgenstein etc.). Some interesting lesser known figures are brought to light (Kracauer for example)and there is some fantastic material here extracted from larger works, but be warned! this is a book with its own agenda. | Rethinking Compilations | Customer Rating: | | This book is a compilation of essays on architecture from a very distinctive and unique point of view, which shows people involved with architecture or its related fields the perspective of recognised sociologists, communicators, semiologists et cetera, and which constitutes a very valuable tool for a deeper understanding of our everyday proceedings in such a globalizing practice as the art of designing works of art where we can dwell. |
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