Description
Book SynopsisLooks at how Deleuze challenges architecture as a discipline, how architecture contributes to philosophy and how we can come to understand the politics of space of our increasingly networked world. This title shows Deleuze's influence on the emerging biotechnological paradigm and new practices of participatory design.
Table of ContentsIntroduction: Exhaustion and the Exhausted: Deleuze AND Architecture, Helene Frichot and Stephen Loo; PART ONE: SITING; 1. Becomings: Architecture, Feminism, Deleuze, before and after the Fold, Karen Burns; 2. Northern Line, Deborah Hauptmann and Andrej Radman; 3. Why Deleuze, Why Architecture, Marko Jobst; PART TWO: CONSTRUCTING; 4. Deleuze and the Story of the Superfold, Helene Frichot; 5. Objectile: The Pursuit of Philosophy by Other Means? Bernard Cache; 6. The Architect as Metallurgist: Using Concrete to Trace Bio-Digital Lines, Mike Hale; 7. Assembling Architecture, Kim Dovey; PART THREE: GATHERING; 8. Toward a Theory of the Architectural Subject, Simone Brott; 9. The Holey City: Walking along Istanbul's Theodosian Landwalls, Catharina Gabrielsson; 10. Deleuze, Architecture and Social Fabrication, Andrew Ballantyne; 11. Politics + Deleuze + Guattari + Architecture, Adrian Parr; PART FOUR: CARING; 12. The Ethological City, Cameron Duff; 13. Architectures, Critical and Clinical, Chris L. Smith; 14. Abstract Care, Stephen Loo; 15. Making a Rhizome or Architecture After Deleuze and Guattari, Doina Petrescu, Anne Querrien, Constantin Petcou;.