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There is at the present time a continuing interest in relating the behavioral sciences to design disciplines. Sociologists and social psychologists have been added to faculties of architecture schools, where they off er seminars and participate as programming specialists and design critics in studio courses. Behavioral scientists in many European countries have collaborated with architects and planners in design work undertaken by governmental ministries, and more recently have been participating in the work of private design fi rms. Similar developments are now common in the United States. In this fascinating study of the "ecology of buildings," biologists, anthropologists, sociologists, psychologists, and architects analyze the effect of working and living spaces on human behavior. Focusing on such contemporary social problems as the influence of the physical environment on psychological stress, mental illness, family disorganization, urban violence, and delinquency, the contributors show that we must respect the constraints that the environment and the nature of man impose on human adaptability. The selections in "People and Buildings" have been written primarily by scientists and designers working in the behavioral mode. The selections within each part have been arranged to provide an ordered argument or exploration of the general topic with which the part as a whole deals. To facilitate the reader's appreciation of the argument, each selection is preceded by a short prefatory statement. In view of the fact that a single article or preface can hardly be representative of the depth of the literature that has developed around an argument, Gutman has included an annotated bibliography, which is keyed to the selections through the use of subheadings. A new introduction by Nathan Glazer has been prepared for this edition. "Robert Gutman," until his death in 2007, was a lecturer in social and environmental studies at Princeton University's School of Architecture. He is the author of "Architectural Practice: A Critical View," and "The Design of American Housing: A Reappraisal of the Architect's Role" among numerous scholarly articles. "Nathan Glazer" is professor of education, emeritus, at Harvard University. He is known for his writings on ethnicity and race, immigration, urban development, and social policy in the United States. His books include "We Are All Multiculturalists Now, Beyond the Melting Pot" and "The Lonely Crowd."
There is at the present time a continuing interest in relating the behavioral sciences to design disciplines. Sociologists and social psychologists have been added to faculties of architecture schools, where they off er seminars and participate as programming specialists and design critics in studio courses. Behavioral scientists in many European countries have collaborated with architects and planners in design work undertaken by governmental ministries, and more recently have been participating in the work of private design fi rms. Similar developments are now common in the United States. In this fascinating study of the "ecology of buildings," biologists, anthropologists, sociologists, psychologists, and architects analyze the effect of working and living spaces on human behavior. Focusing on such contemporary social problems as the influence of the physical environment on psychological stress, mental illness, family disorganization, urban violence, and delinquency, the contributors show that we must respect the constraints that the environment and the nature of man impose on human adaptability. The selections in People and Buildings have been written primarily by scientists and designers working in the behavioral mode. The selections within each part have been arranged to provide an ordered argument or exploration of the general topic with which the part as a whole deals. To facilitate the reader's appreciation of the argument, each selection is preceded by a short prefatory statement. In view of the fact that a single article or preface can hardly be representative of the depth of the literature that has developed around an argument, Gutman has included an annotated bibliography, which is keyed to the selections through the use of subheadings. A new introduction by Nathan Glazer has been prepared for this edition.
This major work, the result of years of careful study and analysis,
places Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's life and music in the context of
the intellectual, political and artistic currents of
eighteenth-century Europe. The result is a fresh interpretation of
Mozart's genius, as Robert Gutman shows the great composer in a new
light. With an informed and sensitive handling, Mozart emerges as
an affectionate and generous man with family and friends,
self-deprecating, witty, and winsome but also an austere moralist,
incisive and purposeful. The major genres in which Mozart
worked-chamber music, liturgical, theater and keyboard
compositions, concertos, operas, symphonies, and oratorios-are
unfolded to reveal a man of luminous intellect. Mozart is an
extraordinary portrait of a man and his times and a brilliant
distillation of musical thought.
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