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Summary

Experiments in architectural education in the post–World War II era that challenged and transformed architectural discourse and practice.
 


In the decades after World War II, new forms of learning transformed architectural education. These radical experiments sought to upend disciplinary foundations and conventional assumptions about the nature of architecture as much as they challenged modernist and colonial norms, decentered building, imagined new roles for the architect, and envisioned participatory forms of practice. Although many of the experimental programs were subsequently abandoned, terminated, or assimilated, they nevertheless helped shape and in some sense define architectural discourse and practice. This book explores and documents these radical pedagogies and efforts to defy architecture’s status quo.
 
The experiments include the adaptation of Bauhaus pedagogy as a means of “unlearning” under the conditions of decolonization in Africa; a movement to design for “every body,” including the disabled, by architecture students and faculty at the University of California, Berkeley; the founding of a support network for women interested in the built environment, regardless of their academic backgrounds; and a design studio in the USSR that offered an alternative to the widespread functionalist approach in Soviet design. Viewed through their dissolution and afterlife as well as through their founding stories, these projects from the last century raise provocative questions about architecture’s role in the new century.
 

Author Biography

Beatriz Colomina is Howard Crosby Butler Professor of the History of Architecture at Princeton University and the author of X-Ray Architecture and other books. Ignacio G. Galán is Assistant Professor at Barnard College, Columbia University. Evangelos Kotsioris, an architectural historian, architect, and curator, is a Curatorial Assistant in the Department of Architecture and Design at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. Anna-Maria Meister is Professor of Architecture Theory and Science at Technical University of Darmstadt.
 

Table of Contents

Contents
Counter Hegemonies
Alternative Modernizations
City as Site
The Value of Form
Theory Constructions
Beyond the Classroom
Schooled by the Building
Media Experiments
Subject and Body Matters
Intersecting Global and Local
Technology and its Complexes
Material Ecologies
Retooling the Practice
Activating the Social
Contributors
Acknowledgments
Exhibitions, Previous Publications
Image Credits
Index

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