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Toward a Minor Architecture

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A major proposal for a minor architecture, and for the making of spaces out of the already built.

Architecture can no longer limit itself to the art of making buildings; it must also invent the politics of taking them apart. This is Jill Stoner's premise for a minor architecture. Her architect's eye tracks differently from most, drawn not to the lauded and iconic but to what she calls “the landscape of our constructed mistakes”—metropolitan hinterlands rife with failed and foreclosed developments, undersubscribed office parks, chain hotels, and abandoned malls. These graveyards of capital, Stoner asserts, may be stripped of their excess and become sites of strategic spatial operations. But first we must dissect and dismantle prevalent architectural mythologies that brought them into being—western obsessions with interiority, with the autonomy of the building-object, with the architect's mantle of celebrity, and with the idea of nature as that which is “other” than the built metropolis. These four myths form the warp of the book.

Drawing on the literary theory of Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari, Stoner suggests that minor architectures, like minor literatures, emerge from the bottoms of power structures and within the language of those structures. Yet they too are the result of powerful and instrumental forces. Provoked by collective desires, directed by the instability of time, and celebrating contingency, minor architectures may be mobilized within buildings that are oversaturated, underutilized, or perceived as obsolete.

Stoner's provocative challenge to current discourse veers away from design, through a diverse landscape of cultural theory, contemporary fiction, and environmental ethics. Hers is an optimistic and inclusive approach to a more politicized practice of architecture.

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    • Library Journal

      May 1, 2012

      Stoner (architecture, Univ. of California, Berkeley) follows in the footsteps of Jane Jacobs (The Death and Life of Great American Cities), who worked to overturn the policies of Robert Moses, the urban planner who reshaped mid-20th-century New York City. She critiques the empty malls and office parks characteristic of urban sprawl and examines how they emerged from four major mindsets still prevalent in architecture. The book's chapters examine each of these "mythologies": of architecture as contra to nature, of building as autonomous object, of the supreme importance of interiors, and of the culture of architect as celebrity. Stoner argues that underutilized buildings can be transformed through something she terms minor architecture, which is the art of reoccupying them, e.g., the current artistic reclamation of abandoned buildings in Detroit. This book reimagines architecture as a kind of literature, and Stoner is heavily indebted to the writings of French philosophers Gilles Deleuze and Pierre-Felix Guattari (coauthors, Anti-Oedipus), whose theories of minor literatures she used to shape her own ideas. VERDICT Recommended for all readers interested in architecture--this should be required reading in every design school.--Peter S. Kaufman, formerly with Boston Architectural Coll.

      Copyright 2012 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

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