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Postmodern architecture - with its return to ornamentality,
historical quotation, and low-culture kitsch - has long been seen
as a critical and popular anodyne to the worst aspects of modernist
architecture: glass boxes built in urban locales as so many
interchangeable, generic anti-architectural cubes and slabs. This
book extends this debate beyond the modernist/postmodernist rivalry
to situate postmodernism as an already superseded concept that has
been upended by deconstructionist and virtual architecture as well
as the continued turn toward the use of theming in much new public
and corporate space. It investigates architecture on the margins of
postmodernism -- those places where both architecture and
postmodernism begin to break down and to reveal new forms and new
relationships. The book examines in detail not only a wide range of
architectural phenomena such as theme parks, casinos, specific
modernist and postmodernist buildings, but also interrogates
architecture in relation to identity, specifically Native American
and gay male identities, as they are reflected in new notions of
the built environment. In dealing specifically with the
intersection between postmodern architecture and virtual and filmic
definitions of space, as well as with theming, and gender and
racial identities, this book provides provides ground-breaking
insights not only into postmodern architecture, but into spatial
thinking in general.
Although David Bowie has famously characterized himself as a "leper
messiah," a more appropriate moniker might be "rock god" someone
whose influence has crossed numerous sub-genres of popular and
classical music and can at times seem ubiquitous. By looking at key
moments in his career (1972, 1977-79, 1980-83, and 1995-97) through
several lenses--theories of sub-culture, gender/sexuality studies,
theories of sound, post-colonial theory, and performance studies
Waldrep will examine Bowie's work in terms not only of his auditory
output but his many reinterpretations of it via music videos,
concert tours, television appearances, and occasional movie roles.
Future Nostalgia will look at all aspects of Bowie's
career--musical recordings, live concerts, music videos, film
performances, and television appearance--in an attempt to trace
Bowie's contribution to the performative paradigms that constitute
contemporary rock music.
As film and television become ever more focused on the pornographic
gaze of the camera, the human body undergoes a metamorphosis,
becoming both landscape and building, part of an architectonic
design in which the erotics of the body spread beyond the body
itself to influence the design of the film or televisual shot. The
body becomes the mise-en-scène of contemporary moving imagery.
Opening The Space of Sex, Shelton Waldrep sets up some important
tropes for the book: the movement between high and low art; the
emphasis on the body, looking, and framing; the general intermedial
and interdisciplinary methodology of the book as a whole. The Space
of Sex’s second half focuses on how sex, gender, and sexuality
are represented in several recent films, including Paul
Schrader’s The Canyons (2013), Oliver Stone’s Savages (2012),
Steven Soderbergh’s Magic Mike (2012), Lars Von Trier’s
Nymphomaniac (2013), and Joseph Gordon-Levitt’s Don Jon (2013).
Each of these mainstream or independent movies, and several more,
are examined for the ways they have attempted to absorb
pornography, if not the pornography industry specifically, into
their plot. According to Waldrep, the utopian elements of seventies
porn get reprocessed in a complex way in the twenty-first century
as both a utopian impulse—the desire to have sex on the screen,
to re-eroticize sex as something positive and lacking in
shame—with a mixed feeling about pornography itself, with an
industry that can be seen in a dystopian light. In other words,
sex, in our contemporary world, still does not come without
compromise.
Postmodern architecture - with its return to ornamentality,
historical quotation, and low-culture kitsch - has long been seen
as a critical and popular anodyne to the worst aspects of modernist
architecture: glass boxes built in urban locales as so many
interchangeable, generic anti-architectural cubes and slabs. This
book extends this debate beyond the modernist/postmodernist rivalry
to situate postmodernism as an already superseded concept that has
been upended by deconstructionist and virtual architecture as well
as the continued turn toward the use of theming in much new public
and corporate space. It investigates architecture on the margins of
postmodernism -- those places where both architecture and
postmodernism begin to break down and to reveal new forms and new
relationships. The book examines in detail not only a wide range of
architectural phenomena such as theme parks, casinos, specific
modernist and postmodernist buildings, but also interrogates
architecture in relation to identity, specifically Native American
and gay male identities, as they are reflected in new notions of
the built environment. In dealing specifically with the
intersection between postmodern architecture and virtual and filmic
definitions of space, as well as with theming, and gender and
racial identities, this book provides provides ground-breaking
insights not only into postmodern architecture, but into spatial
thinking in general.
As film and television become ever more focused on the pornographic
gaze of the camera, the human body undergoes a metamorphosis,
becoming both landscape and building, part of an architectonic
design in which the erotics of the body spread beyond the body
itself to influence the design of the film or televisual shot. The
body becomes the mise-en-scene of contemporary moving imagery.
Opening The Space of Sex, Shelton Waldrep sets up some important
tropes for the book: the movement between high and low art; the
emphasis on the body, looking, and framing; the general intermedial
and interdisciplinary methodology of the book as a whole. The Space
of Sex's second half focuses on how sex, gender, and sexuality are
represented in several recent films, including Paul Schrader's The
Canyons (2013), Oliver Stone's Savages (2012), Steven Soderbergh's
Magic Mike (2012), Lars Von Trier's Nymphomaniac (2013), and Joseph
Gordon-Levitt's Don Jon (2013). Each of these mainstream or
independent movies, and several more, are examined for the ways
they have attempted to absorb pornography, if not the pornography
industry specifically, into their plot. According to Waldrep, the
utopian elements of seventies porn get reprocessed in a complex way
in the twenty-first century as both a utopian impulse-the desire to
have sex on the screen, to re-eroticize sex as something positive
and lacking in shame-with a mixed feeling about pornography itself,
with an industry that can be seen in a dystopian light. In other
words, sex, in our contemporary world, still does not come without
compromise.
ABBA, Queen's 'Bohemian Rhapsody', Wayne's World I and II. David Bowie. Blaxploitation. Platform shoes. Bathhouses. The Brady Bunch. The Brady Bunch Movie. Boogie Nights. Not only were the '70s filled with cultural icons and phenomena galore, but today we are increasingly seeing a resurgence of styles and elements of that wacky era in between the decade of the left and the decade of the right. The Seventies delves into these themes and reveals what they meant at the time and what their recurrence means for us today. Liberally illustrated with photographs, the book is divided into five sections: Re/Defining the Seventies, Identifying Genres, Fashioning the Body, Queering the Seventies, and Talking Music. The contributors take you on a fascinating journey that looks at the Black Panthers, Jonestown, glam rock, black action films and gay male subcultures as well as including queer rereadings of cultural phenomena, examinations of clothing and seventies bodies, and an essay on the meaning of sound in the seventies. The Seventies is must reading for anyone who wants to revisit that glam decade and the contributions it made to our culture.
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