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The Architecture of Influence: The Myth of Originality in the Twentieth Century Hardcover – November 21, 2023
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How do we create the new from the old? The Architecture of Influence explores this fundamental question by analyzing a broad swath of twentieth-century architectural works―including some of the best-known examples of the architectural canon, modern and postmodern―through the lens of influence. The book serves as both a critique of the discipline’s long-standing focus on "genius" and a celebration of the creative act of revisioning and reimagining the past. It argues that all works of architecture not only depend on the past but necessarily alter, rewrite, and reposition the traditions and ideas to which they refer. Organized into seven chapters―Replicas, Copies, Compilations, Generalizations, Revivals, Emulations, and Self-Repetitions―the book redefines influence as an active process through which the past is defined, recalled, and subsequently redefined within twentieth-century architecture.
- Print length280 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherUniversity of Virginia Press
- Publication dateNovember 21, 2023
- Dimensions7 x 1 x 9 inches
- ISBN-100813950589
- ISBN-13978-0813950587
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Editorial Reviews
Review
[A] genre-breaking discussion of the inter-relatedness of architectural creativity . . . debunking of the myth of individual genius. Lawrence’s work offers a fundamental re-examination of 20th-century American architecture.―Booklaunch
Despite an expectation within the profession for newness and the larger cultural value often placed on innovation, significant works by some of the best-known architects consistently rely on processes of citation and referentiality. Lawrence astutely reveals how practices of appropriation, duplication, and copying were not the exception but were rather an integral part of a pervasive norm. . . . Lawrence reveals the intricate and inescapable nature of referentiality within design. She also shows how more recent works read, revise, and reinterpret sources differently from older ones, since history is always filtered through contemporary media that frame our engagement with the past.―Architectural Record
Book Description
Amanda Lawrence’s new book is most definitely original—not in the architecture it studies, but in its approach to these designs. Taking on what is generally regarded as the fraught subject of influence in architecture, Lawrence helps us see mostly familiar projects in an entirely new way, framing its impact as a two-way street: as architects borrow from the past, they also transform our understanding of that past. She lays out this argument deftly and with admirable step-by-step clarity in the introduction and then delivers her supporting evidence in the chapters that follow, each of them exploring and defining a distinct tactic in architecture’s use of its history.
About the Author
Amanda Reeser Lawrence is Associate Professor of Architecture at Northeastern University and the author of James Stirling: Revisionary Modernist and coeditor of Terms of Appropriation: Modern Architecture and Global Exchange.
Product details
- Publisher : University of Virginia Press
- Publication date : November 21, 2023
- Language : English
- Print length : 280 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0813950589
- ISBN-13 : 978-0813950587
- Item Weight : 1.5 pounds
- Dimensions : 7 x 1 x 9 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,388,046 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #467 in Architectural Criticism
- #1,778 in Architectural History
- #4,791 in Arts & Photography Criticism
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