9780997260250-0997260254-Cornell Journal of Architecture 12: After (The Cornell Journal of Architecture)

Cornell Journal of Architecture 12: After (The Cornell Journal of Architecture)

ISBN-13: 9780997260250
ISBN-10: 0997260254
Author: Val Warke, Hallie Black, Todd Petrie
Publication date: 2022
Publisher: Cornell AAP Publications
Format: Paperback 428 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9780997260250
ISBN-10: 0997260254
Author: Val Warke, Hallie Black, Todd Petrie
Publication date: 2022
Publisher: Cornell AAP Publications
Format: Paperback 428 pages

Summary

Cornell Journal of Architecture 12: After (The Cornell Journal of Architecture) (ISBN-13: 9780997260250 and ISBN-10: 0997260254), written by authors Val Warke, Hallie Black, Todd Petrie, was published by Cornell AAP Publications in 2022. With an overall rating of 3.9 stars, it's a notable title among other Criticism (Architecture) books. You can easily purchase or rent Cornell Journal of Architecture 12: After (The Cornell Journal of Architecture) (Paperback) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used Criticism books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.3.

Description

Organized around a timeline that demonstrates the range of "presents" and "afters" we find ourselves contemplating, this volume of the Cornell Journal of Architecture considers our terrestrial occupations from a variety of real and imagined perspectives, from the prehistoric to the future-imperfect. It seems that―with increased urgency―we are more frequently finding ourselves grasping for an "after," especially as we face futures with apprehension. "After" exists at different scales of time and context: there’s after an instant, after a day, after an era. And each after contains both a conclusion and a beginning. This volume of the Cornell Journal of Architecture looks at a vast range of the "afters" we architects find ourselves confronting, and offers not just warnings, but solutions; not just reminders, but projections. Because, while we humans are obliged to stand squarely within the present, as architects we’re equally obliged to cast our work into a hereafter that can be only loosely understood. And then we can hope that, in the aftermath, our intentions bear some resemblance to their consequences. With Contributions of a vast selection of architects, artists, designers, historians, and geoscientists, including Peter van Assche, James Biber, Olalekan Jeyifous, Michael Murphy with Jha D Williams, Felix Heisel, Jacques Ferrier, Common Accounts, Meredith Miller and T+E+A+M, and many others, representing an extensive diversity of approaches for identifying techniques of transcending pasts and presents.

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