錯乱のニューオリンズ:新たなアメリカ都市の創造のために<br>Delirious New Orleans : Manifesto for an Extraordinary American City (Roger Fullington Series in Architecture)

錯乱のニューオリンズ:新たなアメリカ都市の創造のために
Delirious New Orleans : Manifesto for an Extraordinary American City (Roger Fullington Series in Architecture)

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  • 製本 Hardcover:ハードカバー版/ページ数 252 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9780292717534
  • DDC分類 720.976335

基本説明

Because so many of these places and artifacts were devastated by Hurricane Katrina, Delirious New Orleans has become both a historical record of what existed in the past and a blueprint for what must be rebuilt and restored to retain the city's unique multicultural landscape.

Full Description


Winner, Abbott Lowell Cummings Prize, Vernacular Architecture Forum, 2010 From iconic neighborhoods such as the French Quarter and the Garden District to more economically modest but no less culturally vibrant areas, architecture is a key element that makes New Orleans an extraordinary American city. Delirious New Orleans began as a documentary project to capture the idiosyncratic vernacular architecture and artifacts-vintage mom-and-pop businesses, roadside motels, live music clubs, neon signs, wall murals, fast-food joints, and so on-that helped give the city's various neighborhoods their unique character. But because so many of these places and artifacts were devastated by Hurricane Katrina, Delirious New Orleans has become both a historical record of what existed in the past and a blueprint for what must be rebuilt and restored to retain the city's unique multicultural landscape. Stephen Verderber starts with the premise that New Orleans's often-overlooked neighborhoods imbue the city with deep authenticity as a place.He opens Delirious New Orleans with a photo-essay that vividly presents this vernacular architecture and its artifacts, both before Katrina and in its immediate aftermath. In the following sections of the book, which are also heavily illustrated, Verderber takes us on a tour of the city's commercial vernacular architecture, as well as the expressive folk architecture of its African American neighborhoods. He discusses how the built environment was profoundly shaped by New Orleans's history of race and class inequities and political maneuvering, along with its peculiar, below-sea-level geography. Verderber also considers the aftermath of Katrina and the armada of faceless FEMA trailers that have, at least temporarily and by default, transformed this urban landscape.

Contents

Foreword Preface and Acknowledgments Part 1Landscape Part 2: Commercial Vernacular Architecture in New Orleans Part 3: Soul, Funk, and Hip-Hop Part 4: Illusion, Delusion, and Folly Part 5: Roadside Nomadicism and a City's Rebirth Part 6: Architecture under Siege: A Lesson from Katrina for Twenty-First-Century America Notes Index

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