Fr. 43.50

Perspecta 49 - Quote

English · Paperback / Softback

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Informationen zum Autor AJ Artemel is a graduate of the Yale School of Architecture. Russell LeStourgeon is a graduate of the Yale School of Architecture Violette de la Selle is a graduate of the Yale School of Architecture Klappentext An exploration of quotation, appropriation, and plagiarism, arguing that quotation and associated operations are ubiquitous, intentional, and vital in architecture. Every intellectual endeavor relies upon an existing body of knowledge, proven and primed for reuse. Historically, this appropriation has been regulated through quotation. Academics trade epigraphs and footnotes while designers refer to precedents and manifestos. These citations—written or spoken, drawn or built—rely on their antecedent, and carry the stamp of authority. In the field of architecture, appropriation is faster, easier, and more conspicuous than ever, but also less regulated. These displacements are no longer self-referential games. Instead, buildings are copied before construction is completed. Digital scripts are downloaded, altered, and re-uploaded—transposing the algorithm, not the object itself. Design bloggers "curate” texts and images—copying and pasting, copying and pasting. In the sea of memes and GIFs, tweets and retweets, quotes are both innumerable and viral, giving voice to anyone with access to these channels. Traditionally, the practice of quotation has inoculated the author against accusations of plagiarism. Today, the quicksilver nature of contemporary communications obscures chains of reference. Must we jettison conventions of authorship or will we establish new codes of citation? This issue of Perspecta—the oldest and most distinguished student-edited architectural journal in America—explores the uneasy lines between quotation, appropriation, and plagiarism, proposing a constructive reevaluation of contemporary means of architectural production and reproduction. Although architecture is a discipline that prizes originality and easily ascribed authorship, it is important to recognize that quotation and associated operations are ubiquitous, intentional, and vital, not just palliatives to the anxiety of influence. These are perhaps the most potent tools of cultural production, yet also the most contested. Perspecta 49 welcomes the contest. Zusammenfassung An exploration of quotation, appropriation, and plagiarism, arguing that quotation and associated operations are ubiquitous, intentional, and vital in architecture. Every intellectual endeavor relies upon an existing body of knowledge, proven and primed for reuse. Historically, this appropriation has been regulated through quotation. Academics trade epigraphs and footnotes while designers refer to precedents and manifestos. These citations—written or spoken, drawn or built—rely on their antecedent, and carry the stamp of authority. In the field of architecture, appropriation is faster, easier, and more conspicuous than ever, but also less regulated. These displacements are no longer self-referential games. Instead, buildings are copied before construction is completed. Digital scripts are downloaded, altered, and re-uploaded—transposing the algorithm, not the object itself. Design bloggers “curate” texts and images—copying and pasting, copying and pasting. In the sea of memes and GIFs, tweets and retweets, quotes are both innumerable and viral, giving voice to anyone with access to these channels. Traditionally, the practice of quotation has inoculated the author against accusations of plagiarism. Today, the quicksilver nature of contemporary communications obscures chains of reference. Must we jettison conventions of authorship or will we establish new codes of citation? This issue of Perspecta —the oldest and most distinguished student-edited architectural journal in America—explores the uneasy lines between quotation, appropriati...

Product details

Authors A. J. Artemel, A. J. Lestourgeon Artemel, AJ Artemel, Deborah Berke, Vi De La Selle, Violette De La Selle, Peggy Deamer, Russell LeStourgeon, Russell Artemel Lestourgeon, Violette de la Selle
Assisted by A. J. Artemel (Editor), AJ Artemel (Editor), Violette De La Selle (Editor), Russell LeStourgeon (Editor), Violette de la Selle (Editor)
Publisher The MIT Press
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 31.08.2016
 
EAN 9780262529426
ISBN 978-0-262-52942-6
No. of pages 288
Dimensions 229 mm x 305 mm x 22 mm
Series Perspecta
Perspecta 49
Perspecta
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Art > Architecture

Architecture, ARCHITECTURE / Criticism

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