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Full Description
Originally published in 1993, as part of the Ethnoscapes: Current Challenges in the Environmental Social Sciences series, reissued now with a new series introduction, Placemaking: Production of Built Environment in Two Cultures is a book about the context of placemaking - the production of vernacular architecture and settlement. It is an attempt at prototheory, the formation of a perspective with which to view built environment produced by traditional societies. Focusing on two examples: carved dwellings and other masonry structures of Anatolian Turkey and pre- and post-conquest Southwestern pueblos in the US. Architectural and settlement phenomena are analyzed primarily in terms of the social forces that gave rise to them, rather than their formal properties.
Contents
New Series Introduction to the Reissue David Canter and David Stea. Foreword by Anthony King. Preface. Acknowledgments. List of Illustrations. Introduction: A Critical Overview 1. Breaking Ground for Placemaking 2. Sheltering Landscapes and Vicarious Housing 3. From Shelter to Settlement 4. Urbanization in the Neolithic 5. Cliff Hangers and Troglodytes 6. Beyond Impressions: Structuring an Explanation 7. Understanding Placemaking: The Anatolians and the Anasazi 8. Reconstruction: Toward New Foundations. Appendix 1: Anasazi Abandonments and the "Mesoamerican Connection". Appendix 2: Transitions in Modes of Production: Alternative Models of Social Change. Bibliography. Index.