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Through examining the boundaries of where discourses, practices and designs are considered publishable (suitable to be made public) or not, the book exposes criteria and cultures which censor architecture so as to offer ways that architecture can be more inclusive and diverse for society at large.
List of contents
Frontispiece: Silence (Part 1)
Jan Smitheram
Spaces of Tolerance: An Introduction
Igea Troiani and Suzanne Ewing
1. Tolerance in the Peer Review of Interdisciplinary Research in Architectural Journal Publishing
Igea Troiani and Suzanne Ewing
2. "You are embued with tolerance ..."
Julieanna Preston
3. Yielding and (Not) Breaking: Two Observations on the Walls of a Psychiatric Hospital
Ebba Högström and Gesa Helms
4. "Give Me Some Wiggle Room": How to Feel at Home in the Gap between Design, Building and Decay
Bart Decroos and Lara Schrijver
5. Ma as a Space-Time Concept of Becoming: Karl-Heinz Klopf's Tower House (2013)
Željka Pješivac
6. Trace: Translating Bankside Air Raid Shelter through Material and Spatial Tracings
Corinna Dean, Victoria Watson and Duarte Santo
7. Passage Variations: An Elliptical History of Migration in Eleonas
Ektoras Arkomanis
8. (Re)building Spaces of Tolerance: A "Symbiotic Model" for the Post-War City Regeneration
Aleksandar Stani¿i¿ and Milan Šijakovi¿
9. Into the Clouds of Rakuchu Rakugai Zu: Eastern< >Western Drawing Tolerance Critiqued through Speculative Drawing Practices
Sayan Skandarajah
10. Between Zero and One: Tolerances of Fabrication and Society in Architecture's Digital Materialism
Dane Clark and Aaron Tobey
Endpiece: Silence (Part 2)
Jan Smitheram
About the author
Igea Troiani is Professor of Architecture and Head of the School of Architecture at the University of Plymouth. She has worked as an academic, architect and filmmaker in Australia, Germany, China and the UK. Her books include
The Politics of Making (Routledge, 2007/2017),
Transdisciplinary Urbanism and Culture (Springer, 2017),
Architecture Filmmaking (Intellect, 2019), and
Visual Research Methods in Architecture (Intellect, 2020). She founded the award-winning AHRA journal,
Architecture and Culture in 2013 and has been editor-in-chief of it since.
Suzanne Ewing is architect, academic and educator and was Head of the Edinburgh School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture at the University of Edinburgh, 2016-18. She co-founded Zone Architects, UK, in 2002. Edited publications include
Architecture and Field/Work (Routledge, 2011),
Visual Research Methods in Architecture (Intellect, 2020). She is co-editor of the international award-winning journal,
Architecture and Culture.
Summary
Through examining the boundaries of where discourses, practices and designs are considered publishable (suitable to be made public) or not, the book exposes criteria and cultures which censor architecture so as to offer ways that architecture can be more inclusive and diverse for society at large.