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The home as part of material culture is the very place where the
intricate relations between architecture, gender and domesticity
become visible. This book investigates the multi-layered themes
evoked by the interconnections between these terms. The
contributions to this book address the gendered conceptions and the
use of built spaces, the role of women as active agents of spatial
production, and the mutual inscriptions of the materiality of
architectural space and gendered subjectivities.
The focus of inquiry is modern architecture, also including the
celebrated architecture of the Modern movement as its more common
and widely spread derivatives that became the dominant mode of
building in the twentieth century. The articles in the introductory
section provide an overview of the existing discourse on modernity,
domesticity and gender. The following three sections consist of
essays on specific spatial scenarios from a broad range of
geographical locations in the West, whereby the complicated
relationship between gender and domestic space are revealed in
architectural discourse and practice. The topics range from
well-known architects and architectural examples such as Adolf Loos
and the Maison de Verre to relatively unknown cases such as the
polykatoikia apartments in Greece. In all cases, the authors'
emphasis remains on how the concept of domesticity is produced by
the gendered subjectivity of builders and users of domestic spaces
and by architectural discourse.
The essays brought together in this book are based upon new
interdisciplinary research which enriches architectural history
with sociological, anthropological, philosophical and
psychoanalytical approaches. Despitethe Modern movement's prominent
emphasis on housing, the point is often made that modern art and
architecture were about the suppression rather than the
glorification of domesticity. This book contends that the modern
era marks the rise of a new sense of domesticity that developed
simultaneously with re-definitions of gender roles and which led to
unprecedented articulations of sexuality with domestic space.
In the home the intricate relations between architecture, gender
and domesticity become visible. Negotiating Domesticity
investigates the many and complex themes evoked by the
interconnections between these terms.
Topics covered include famous as well as less well-known
architectural examples and architects, which are explored from
sociological, anthropological, philosophical and psychoanalytical
approaches. The authors explore the relationships between modern
domestic spaces and sexed subjectivities in a broad range of
geographical locations of Western modernity.
This richly interdisiplinary work presents architects and
postgraduate students with an in-depth exploration of domesticity
in the modern era.
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Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R164
Discovery Miles 1 640
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