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Architecture's Desire: Reading the Late Avant-Garde
Contributor(s): Hays, K. Michael (Author)
ISBN: 0262513021     ISBN-13: 9780262513029
Publisher: MIT Press
OUR PRICE:   $22.46  
Product Type: Paperback - Other Formats
Published: October 2009
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Temporarily out of stock - Will ship within 2 to 5 weeks
Annotation: Theorizes an architectural ethos of extreme self-reflection and finality from a Lacanian perspective.
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Architecture | History - Contemporary (1945 -)
- Architecture | Criticism
Dewey: 724.6
LCCN: 2009006132
Series: Writing Architecture
Physical Information: 0.6" H x 5.4" W x 8" (0.80 lbs) 216 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
Theorizes an architectural ethos of extreme self-reflection and finality from a Lacanian perspective.

While it is widely recognized that the advanced architecture of the 1970s left a legacy of experimentation and theoretical speculation as intense as any in architecture's history, there has been no general theory of that ethos. Now, in Architecture's Desire, K. Michael Hays writes an account of the "late avant-garde" as an architecture systematically twisting back on itself, pondering its own historical status, and deliberately exploring architecture's representational possibilities right up to their absolute limits. In close readings of the brooding, melancholy silence of Aldo Rossi, the radically reductive "decompositions" and archaeologies of Peter Eisenman, the carnivalesque excesses of John Hejduk, and the "cinegrammatic" delirium of Bernard Tschumi, Hays narrates the story of architecture confronting its own boundaries with objects of ever more reflexivity, difficulty, and intransigence.

The late avant-garde is the last architecture with philosophical aspirations, an architecture that could think philosophical problems through architecture rather than merely illustrate them. It takes architecture as the object of its own reflection, which in turn produces an unrelenting desire. Using the tools of critical theory together with the structure of Lacan's triad imaginary-symbolic-real, Hays constructs a theory of architectural desire that is historically specific and yet sets the terms and the challenges of all subsequent architectural practice, including today's.


Contributor Bio(s): Hays, K. Michael: - K. Michael Hays is Eliot Noyes Professor of Architectural Theory at Harvard's Graduate School of Design. In 2000 he was appointed the first Adjunct Curator at the Whitney Museum for American Art. He is the author, among other books, of Modern Architecture and the Posthumanist Subject (1995) and the editor of Architecture Theory since 1968 (2000), both published by the MIT Press.