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LA+ GEO (Paperback)
Loot Price: R403
Discovery Miles 4 030
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LA+ GEO (Paperback)
Series: LA+ Interdisciplinary Journal of Landscape Architecture
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Loot Price R403
Discovery Miles 4 030
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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GEO - Earth - is a word that simultaneously signifies something
vast and elemental. It refers to both the planet on which we live
and the soil that sustains us. GEO is the physical and
representational bedrock of landscape architecture - the foundation
of many disciplines from which we draw our knowledge. Geography,
Geology, and Geometry, in particular, are fundamental to our
discipline's intellectual core. And now, we seem ever more
entangled in GEO as some scholars across the sciences and
humanities argue that humans should be recognised as agents of
change at geologic time scales. LA+ GEO includes interviews with
the celebrated author of After the Map, William Rankin, author and
citizensensing visionary Jennifer Gabrys, and New Zealand based
media artist and author Janine Randerson with guest editors Karen
M'Closkey and Keith VanDerSys explore site surveying and sensing
technologies as part of an expanded toolkit for landscape
architects to bring environmental patterns down to earth and into
view. Other notable points are from Designer Robert Gerard
Pietrusko who reveals the covert militaristic agendas of early
aerial land cover interpretation, Geographer Matthew W. Wilson
revisits the rise of critical cartography within geography in the
1980s and '90s. Media scholar Lisa Parks describes the politics of
vertical mediation by recounting the importance of activists' use
of drone-captured video to document both the protests against the
construction of an oil pipeline through tribal lands, as well as
the aggressive countermeasures taken by law enforcement to squelch
the protests. Jeffrey S. Nesbit and David Salomon, rocket launch
pads provide a vehicle to unpack the relationship between
terrestrial and extra-terrestrial territories. Geographers Douglas
Robb and Karen Bakker caution against the voyeuristic tendencies
enabled by the satellite gaze. Through illustrated "Geostories,"
Rania Ghosn imaginatively engages the "global commons" of outer
space and oceans. Designer Matthew Ransom examines the tension
between grassroots organisations and fracking industries in
Pennsylvania. Author and activist Lucy R. Lippard takes us on an
aerial journey across the United States. Historian and geographer
B.W. Higman traces our modern predilections towards flatness.
Through a remaking of Eugene Violletle Duc's Mont Blanc studies,
landscape architect Aisling O'Carroll exposes the imposition of
geometric rationalisation on nature. Noah Heringman revisits the
sublime in 18th-century landscape design, offering parallels to
today's Anthropocene discourses about environmental depletion and
Shannon Mattern examines how rocks are collected, examined, and
displayed as objects of spectacular brilliance - objects that
ultimately reflect back on us by illuminating the histories of
oppression embedded in their extraction.
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