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Architecture and the Body, Science and Culture [Hardback]

Edited by (University of Arkansas, USA)
  • Formāts: Hardback, 262 pages, height x width: 234x156 mm, weight: 612 g, 50 Halftones, black and white; 50 Illustrations, black and white
  • Sērija : Routledge Research in Architecture
  • Izdošanas datums: 16-Oct-2017
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1138188824
  • ISBN-13: 9781138188822
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  • Cena: 191,26 €
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 262 pages, height x width: 234x156 mm, weight: 612 g, 50 Halftones, black and white; 50 Illustrations, black and white
  • Sērija : Routledge Research in Architecture
  • Izdošanas datums: 16-Oct-2017
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1138188824
  • ISBN-13: 9781138188822
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
The relationship of architecture to the human body is a centuries-long and complex one, but not always symmetrical. This book opens a space for historians of the visual arts, archaeologists, architects, and digital humanities professionals to reflect upon embodiment, spatiality, science, and architecture in premodern and modern cultural contexts.

Architecture and the Body, Science and Culture poses one overarching question: How does a periods understanding of bodies as objects of science impinge upon architectural thought and design? The answers are sophisticated, interdisciplinary explorations of theory, technology, symbolism, medicine, violence, psychology, deformity, and salvation, and they have unexpected and fascinating implications for architectural design and history. The new research published in this volume reinvigorates the Western survey-style trajectory from Archaic Greece to postwar Europe with scientificallyframed, bodycentred provocations.

By adding the third factorscienceto the architecture and body equation, this book presents a nuanced appreciation for architectural creativity and its embeddedness in other sets of social, institutional and political relationships. In so doing, it spatializes body theory and ties it to the experience of the built environment in ways that disturb traditional boundaries between the architectural container and the corporeally contained.
List of figures
vii
List of contributors
x
Foreword xiii
Alberto Perez-Gomez
Introduction 1(7)
Kim Sexton
1 Architecture before the body? Articulation and proportion in Archaic and Classical Greece
8(19)
Lian Chikako Chang
2 Healing in motion: locotherapy and the architecture of the Pergamene Asklepieion in the second century CE
27(18)
Ece Okay
3 The crafted bodies of Suger: reconsidering the matter of St-Denis
45(22)
Jason R. Crow
4 Gothic skins: penitents at the cathedral
67(19)
Laura H. Hollengreen
5 Hybrid bodies move to center stage on a brothel in medieval Languedoc
86(20)
Catherine J. Barrett
6 Visceral space: dissection and Michelangelo's Medici Chapel
106(19)
Chloe Costello
7 Soaking in architecture: Montaigne, thermal baths and sixteenth-century medical treatises
125(14)
Lisa Tannenbaum
8 Academic bodies and anatomical architecture in early modern Bologna
139(18)
Kim Sexton
9 The eye of modernity: form, proportion and rhythm in German architectural history of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries
157(20)
Tobias Teutenberg
10 Body and space, Gothic and Cubism: a Czech avant-garde between empathy, aesthetics and science
177(19)
Frank Bauer
11 Rehabilitating the invalid body: architecture and citizenship in Jaap Bakema's design for a Dutch postwar village for the disabled
196(21)
Wanda Katja Liebermann
12 Sacred fortresses: the church of Ste-Bernadette of Banlay and the mechanized body in postwar France
217(17)
Paula Burleigh
Epilogue 234(2)
Kim Sexton
Bibliography 236(19)
Index 255
Kim Sexton is an associate professor of architectural history at the University of Arkansas, USA. Her research focuses on the architecture and urban space of Italian city-states in the late Middle Ages and Renaissance. She is the author of articles published in the Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians and The Art Bulletin, and the upcoming book, The Loggia: Living on Stage in Early Modern Italy.