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The Revolutionary Urbanism of Street Farm - Eco-Anarchism, Architecture and Alternative Technology in the 1970s (Paperback, 1)
Loot Price: R320
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The Revolutionary Urbanism of Street Farm - Eco-Anarchism, Architecture and Alternative Technology in the 1970s (Paperback, 1)
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List price R365
Loot Price R320
Discovery Miles 3 200
You Save R45 (12%)
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Stephen E Hunt has produced the definitive study of Street Farm
(Graham Caine, Peter Crump and Bruce Haggart), a London-based
collective collective of anarchist architects working in the early
1970s. The three friends put together Street Farmer, an underground
paper that, alongside mutating tower blocks, cosmic tractors and
sprouting one-way signs, propagated ideas for the radical
transformation of urban living which they called 'revolutionary
urbanism'. Taking inspiration from Situationism and social ecology,
Street Farm offered a powerful vision of green cities in the
control of ordinary people. As well as writing and drawing, the
group took part in street activism and squatting, were exponents of
autonomous housing and radical technology and became rock 'n' roll
architects, going on the road with multimedia slideshow
presentations to a recorded soundtrack of music by the likes of
John Lennon and Jefferson Airplane. In 1972 Caine built and
designed 'Street Farmhouse' with Haggart and other friends. It hit
national and international headlines as the first structure
intentionally constructed as an ecological house, appearing on an
early BBC documentary introduced by a youthful Melvin Bragg. While
their fame was brief, their ongoing influence on prominent green
architects including Howard Liddell, Brenda Vale and Robert Vale
and Paul Downton has been more enduring. In the present time of
crisis the current hegemony of state and capital offers solutions
that increasingly fail to inspire confidence and lack credibility
in the eyes of millions of world citizens. The principles of
organising society for human well-being and justice and for
ecological viability are enduring. Radical history learns from the
past to inform the present and inspire the struggle for the future.
The utopian current suddenly seems not so utopian; eco-anarchism
offers a set of thinking tools to imagine alternative possibilities
for that future. If we can demand the impossible, we can also
refuse the inevitable.
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