The Architecture of Disability: Buildings, Cities, and Landscapes Beyond Access

Available
Product Details
Price
$24.95  $23.20
Publisher
University of Minnesota Press
Publish Date
Pages
224
Dimensions
5.6 X 8.1 X 0.2 inches | 0.6 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781517912505

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About the Author

A disabled designer and historian of architecture, David Gissen is professor of architecture and urban history at Parsons School of Design at the New School.

Reviews

"This book is an urgent and exhilarating manifesto that calls for nothing less than a complete rethinking of architecture. Rather than insisting that architectural forms need to be adjusted to accommodate a greater diversity of impairments, it uses diversities of physical, mental, social, and collective capacities to unlock new ways to conceive of architecture, model it, design it, describe it, represent it, theorize it, and write histories about it. The fictional singular, athletic, male, young, healthy, undamaged, untraumatized, white body at the center of normative architectural discourse finally gives way to a permanently complex philosophical and political agency reshaping the way buildings are thought."--Beatriz Colomina, author of X-Ray Architecture

"The Architecture of Disability takes a historically rich, theoretically informed route beyond disability access as a functional problem in architecture (and one often poorly resolved). Reading familiar sites such as the Parthenon alongside lesser-known landscapes of walking, rolling, and embodied presence, David Gissen centers disabled perspectives--including his own--to reveal new theoretical avenues to and poetic journeys through the built world."--Bess Williamson, author of Accessible America: A History of Disability and Design