Architecture and the Burdens of Linearity
New Haven: Yale University Press, 1998.
Hardcover. 9 1/2" X 6 1/4". xiv, 196pp. Rubbing, creasing, and toning to covers, corners, and edges of unclipped dust jacket. 3" open tear to bottom edge of rear cover of jacket. Rubbing and bumps to corners and edges of blue paper over boards. Dust-spotting to edges of text block. Inked underlining and notation to pages. Notation does not obscure text. Binding is sound.
ABOUT THIS BOOK:
In this suggestive inquiry into the operations of linearity in architectural theory and practice, Catherine Ingraham investigates the line as both a conceptual and literal force in architecture. She approaches her subject from philosophical, theoretical, practical, and historical points of view, finding the following points of convergence: architecture's relation to property, politics, and economy; architecture's relation to propriety and the need to keep things "in line"; and architecture's relation to the proper name, human identity, object identity, and spatial location and demarcation.
In this engaging discussion, Ingraham considers maps, architectural plans, the laws of geometry, systems of architectural knowledge, and mythologies of architectural origin in work by Le Corbusier, Vitruvius, Alberti, Tafuri, Derrida, Lévi-Strauss, Shakespeare, Lacan, Deleuze, Rilke, and Stendhal. Entering the current complex debates about the relation between theory and practice in architecture, the author also addresses themes in psychoanalytic criticism, poststructural theory, and feminist criticism. Her examination thus moves beyond architecture and its literal structures to the notion of epistemological structure that architecture as a discipline and practice upholds and promotes.(Publisher). Good / fair. Item #13477
ISBN: 0300071191
Price: $18.00