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Perspecta 51: Medium

Author/EditorSilva, Shayari de (Graduate Student, Yal (Author)
Furioso, Dante (Architect) (Author)
Jaff, Samantha (Architect) (Author)
Berke, Deborah (Dean, Yale) (Author)
Deamer, Peggy (Author)
Publisher: MIT Press Ltd
ISBN: 9780262535922
Pub Date23/10/2018
BindingPaperback
Pages360
Dimensions (mm)305(h) * 229(w)
Essays, interviews, and projects that consider the notion of medium and the possibilities for its productive use (and misuse) by architects.
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Essays, interviews, and projects that consider the notion of medium and the possibilities for its productive use (and misuse) by architects.Since the arrival of radio and television in the twentieth century, understandings of space have become visibly intertwined with what is commonly referred to as the media. But what is a medium? Dictionaries define "medium" as something in the middle, or, a means of conveyance, and this elemental understanding of medium has nourished early conversations of networks and cybernetics, as well as recent media theory. Yet today, midcentury architectural fictions and fantasies are reality-nomadic devices connect people, rooms, buildings, and cities to vast networks of data, capital, and energy; media are palpably enmeshed in the concrete built environment surrounding us. This volume of Perspecta-the oldest and most distinguished student-edited architectural journal in America-takes a broad view of medium to take stock of and unpack unexpected relationships.The study of medium is transscalar and transhistorical. Therefore, media are part of a continuum, and architecture is inseparable from medium. For this reason, Perspecta 51 does not focus exclusively on the "new media" of today or predictions about the future; instead, it presents a conversation among varied theories on medium set against a series of architectural case studies. These include articles about about images and digital commons, heating systems and thermostats, sea level rise and flood-monitoring apps, search lights and public space, media walls and megastructures, social media capitals and suburban sprawl, surveillance and library architecture. These stories are grounded in the theories of medium design, mediascapes, and media politics. Perspecta 51 provides new histories and fresh responses to the notion of medium that might illuminate possibilities for its productive use (and misuse) by architects.ContributorsShamsher Ali, Nick Axel, ayr, Aleksandr Bierig, Francesco Casetti, Beatriz Colomina, Keller Easterling, Moritz Gleich, Evangelos Kotsioris, Reinhold Martin, Christine Shannon Mattern, Marshall McLuhan, Scott McQuire, Ginger Nolan, Shveta Sarda, Jeffrey Schnapp, Dubravka Sekulic, Prasad Shetty, Molly Steenson, Neyran Turan, Christina Varvia, Richard Vijgen

Essays, interviews, and projects that consider the notion of medium and the possibilities for its productive use (and misuse) by architects.Since the arrival of radio and television in the twentieth century, understandings of space have become visibly intertwined with what is commonly referred to as the media. But what is a medium? Dictionaries define "medium" as something in the middle, or, a means of conveyance, and this elemental understanding of medium has nourished early conversations of networks and cybernetics, as well as recent media theory. Yet today, midcentury architectural fictions and fantasies are reality-nomadic devices connect people, rooms, buildings, and cities to vast networks of data, capital, and energy; media are palpably enmeshed in the concrete built environment surrounding us. This volume of Perspecta-the oldest and most distinguished student-edited architectural journal in America-takes a broad view of medium to take stock of and unpack unexpected relationships.The study of medium is transscalar and transhistorical. Therefore, media are part of a continuum, and architecture is inseparable from medium. For this reason, Perspecta 51 does not focus exclusively on the "new media" of today or predictions about the future; instead, it presents a conversation among varied theories on medium set against a series of architectural case studies. These include articles about about images and digital commons, heating systems and thermostats, sea level rise and flood-monitoring apps, search lights and public space, media walls and megastructures, social media capitals and suburban sprawl, surveillance and library architecture. These stories are grounded in the theories of medium design, mediascapes, and media politics. Perspecta 51 provides new histories and fresh responses to the notion of medium that might illuminate possibilities for its productive use (and misuse) by architects.ContributorsShamsher Ali, Nick Axel, ayr, Aleksandr Bierig, Francesco Casetti, Beatriz Colomina, Keller Easterling, Moritz Gleich, Evangelos Kotsioris, Reinhold Martin, Christine Shannon Mattern, Marshall McLuhan, Scott McQuire, Ginger Nolan, Shveta Sarda, Jeffrey Schnapp, Dubravka Sekulic, Prasad Shetty, Molly Steenson, Neyran Turan, Christina Varvia, Richard Vijgen

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