Architecture and design in Europe and America, 1750-2000 / edited by Abigail Harrison-Moore and Dorothy C. Rowe.
Blackwell, Malden (Massachusetts) [etc.] : 2006.
XIX, 515 p. : lám. bl. y n.
Colección: Blackwell Anthologies in Art History
ISBN 9781405115315
Arquitectura -- Europa.
Arquitectura -- Estados Unidos.
Arquitectura -- Historia.
Diseño -- Europa.
Diseño -- Estados Unidos.
Sbc Aprendizaje A-72(4) ARC
https://millennium.ehu.es/record=b1737821~S1*spi
“Architecture and Design in
Europe and America, 1750-2000” is an unprecedented teaching anthology that
surveys the history of European and American architecture and design using both
historical and contemporary sources.
- Brings together the best scholarship on the subject, creating a new canon for teaching purposes by introducing a thematic approach.
- Covers three major periods, from 1750-1830, from 1830-1910, and from 1910-2000, with substantial introductions by the editors.
- Pairs primary documents with well-known historiographical essays - along with some key but under-represented works.
- Provides an overview of the history of European and American architecture and design, using both historical and contemporary sources.
Abigail Harrison-Moore is Lecturer in the History of Art and Museum
Studies in the School of Fine Art, History of Art and Cultural Studies,
University of Leeds. She is the author of “Architecture: The Key Concepts” (2006).
Dorothy C. Rowe is Senior Lecturer and Programme Convener of Art History at Roehampton University. She is the author of “Representing Berlin: Sexuality and the City in Imperial and Weimar Germany” (2003).
REVIEWS
“As the first post-structuralist anthology on modern architecture, this compendium embraces feminist, post-colonial, and other historiographical critiques. Its careful selection of primary and secondary sources encourages reflection on the ways architectural history has been constructed.” Nancy Stieber, University of Massachusetts Boston
Dorothy C. Rowe is Senior Lecturer and Programme Convener of Art History at Roehampton University. She is the author of “Representing Berlin: Sexuality and the City in Imperial and Weimar Germany” (2003).
REVIEWS
“As the first post-structuralist anthology on modern architecture, this compendium embraces feminist, post-colonial, and other historiographical critiques. Its careful selection of primary and secondary sources encourages reflection on the ways architectural history has been constructed.” Nancy Stieber, University of Massachusetts Boston
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