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Architecture --- Queer theory --- Gender identity --- Homosexuality and architecture --- Théorie allosexuelle --- Identité sexuelle --- Homosexualité et architecture --- Homosexuality and architecture. --- Théorie allosexuelle --- Identité sexuelle --- Homosexualité et architecture --- Architecture and homosexuality --- Gender identity.
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"Featuring contributions from a range of significant voices in the field, this volume renews the conversation around what it means to speak of the 'queer' in the context of architecture, and offers a fresh take on the methodological and epistemological challenges this poses to the discipline of architectural theory. Architecture as a discipline, a profession and an applied practice, is always subordinate to its own conceptual framework, which is one of orderliness. It refers to buildings, but also to infrastructures of thought and knowledge, to conventions and taxonomies, to structures of governance, hierarchies of power and systems of administration. How, then, can one look at queering architectural discourse when the very term 'queer', celebrated for its elusive, slippery nature, resists and attacks such order? Divided into four subsections, the essays in this anthology each purse a distinct line of inquiry - methods, practices, spaces, and pedagogies - in order to help particularize the proposed queering of architecture. They demonstrate the paradoxical nature of the endeavour from a diverse range of perspectives - from the questions of mapping queer theory in architecture; to the issues of queer architectural archives, or lack thereof; to the non-Western linguistic challenges to the very term queer alongside decolonial approaches to architecture via indigeneity and landscape. Queering Architecture not only provides a bold challenge to the normative methods employed in architectural discourse but addresses the paradoxical nature of establishing 'queer' methodologies in itself. Essential reading for architectural and queer theorists"--
Homosexuality and architecture. --- Architecture --- Queer theory. --- Homosexualité et architecture --- Théorie queer --- Philosophy. --- Philosophie --- Homosexualité et architecture. --- Théorie queer. --- Philosophie. --- Sociology of the family. Sociology of sexuality --- homosexuality --- architectuurfilosofie --- sociale filosofie --- LGBTQ+ --- Homosexuality and architecture --- Queer theory --- Philosophy
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Ce numéro questionne à la fois la dimension spatiale des sexualités et la dimension sexuelle des espaces sous le prisme de l'espace public. L'expression "espace public" employée au singulier et au pluriel permet d'envisager la fabrique des identités individuelles, le déploiement des pratiques spatiales et la construction des territoires dans ce qu'ils ont de sexuel. Trois approches sont ici abordées, la première concerne les rapports sociaux, la deuxième porte un éclairage sur les rapports des acteurs aux normes, aux territorialités et enfin, la dernière mobilise la dimension spatiale des sexualités sous l'angle des revendications politiques et sociales.
Sociology, Urban --- Sex customs --- Prostitution --- Homosexuality and architecture --- Homosexuality --- Sociologie urbaine --- Vie sexuelle --- Homosexualité et architecture --- Homosexualité
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Queering the Interior problematizes the familiar space of `home'. It deploys a queer lens to view domestic interiors and conventions and uncovers some of the complexities of homemaking for queer people. Each of the book's six sections focuses on a different room or space inside the home. The journey starts with entryways, and continues through kitchens, living spaces, bedrooms, bathrooms, and finally, closets and studies. In each case up to three specialists bring their disciplinary expertise and queer perspectives to bear. The result is a fascinating collection of essays by scholars from literary studies, geography, sociology, anthropology, history and art history. The contributors use historical and sociological case studies; spatial, art and literary analyses; interviews; and experimental visual approaches to deliver fresh, detailed and grounded perspectives on the home and its queer dimensions. A highly creative approach to the analysis of domestic spaces, Queering the Interior makes an important contribution to the fields of gender studies, social and cultural history, cultural studies, design, architecture, anthropology, sociology, and cultural geography. ueering the Interior problematizes the familiar space of 'home'. It deploys a queer lens to view domestic interiors and conventions and uncovers some of the complexities of homemaking for queer people.Each of the book's six sections focuses on a different room or space inside the home. The journey starts with entryways, and continues through kitchens, living spaces, bedrooms, bathrooms, and finally, closets and studies. In each case up to three specialists bring their disciplinary expertise and queer perspectives to bear. The result is a fascinating collection of essays by scholars from literary studies, geography, sociology, anthropology, history and art history. The contributors use historical and sociological case studies; spatial, art and literary analyses; interviews; and experimental visual approaches to deliver fresh, detailed and grounded perspectives on the home and its queer dimensions.A highly creative approach to the analysis of domestic spaces, Queering the Interior makes an important contribution to the fields of gender studies, social and cultural history, cultural studies, design, architecture, anthropology, sociology, and cultural geography.
Gender studies: men. --- Gay men --- Lesbians --- Homosexuality and architecture. --- Home economics. --- Interior decoration. --- Dwellings. --- Homosexuels --- Lesbiennes --- Homosexualité et architecture --- Habitations --- habitations --- homosexuality --- home [concept] --- Sociology of the family. Sociology of sexuality --- Architecture --- Sociology of environment --- interior views --- interior decoration --- Habitations. --- Homosexualité et architecture. --- habitations. --- Home. --- Queer theory. --- Homosexuality and architecture --- Personal space --- Room layout (Dwellings) --- Homosexuels masculins --- Foyer --- Théorie queer --- Espace personnel --- Aménagement --- Homosexualité et architecture.
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Gay men. --- City and town life. --- Homosexuality and architecture --- Sociology, Urban --- Homosexuality --- Homosexuels masculins --- Vie urbaine --- Homosexualité et architecture --- Sociologie urbaine --- Homosexualité
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Sexuality and gender have long been influential in understanding the construction of domestic space, its meanings, often revealing a binary division of private and public, female and male. By reconstructing the foundation of queer critiques of space and by analyzing the representation of domesticity in contemporary art and architecture, Unplanned Visitors shows the blurring of private and public that can occur in any domestic space and explores the potential of queer theory for understanding, and designing, the built environment. Olivier Vallerand investigates how queer critiques, building on pioneering feminist work, question the relation between identity and architecture and highlight normative constructs underlying domestic spaces. He draws out a genealogy of queer space in theoretical discourse in architecture, studying projects by Mark Robbins, Joel Sanders, J Mayer H, Elmgreen & Dragset, Andrés Jaque, and MYCKET, among others. Those works blur the traditional borders between architecture and art to emphasise the tensions between private and public and their impact on assumptions about domestic space and family structure. The challenges in moving from experimental installations to built environments suggest how designers must acknowledge and respond to the social contexts that shape architecture, rethinking how domestic spaces can be designed to allow everyone to better manage how their self-identification is expressed through their living environments. Unplanned Visitors poses a challenge to traditional architectural theory and history, but also suggests a renewed and more inclusive ethics whereby designers explicitly address social and political power structures. The potential of a queer approach to architectural design, history, theory, and education is precisely to enact a method that creates more inclusive buildings and safer neighbourhoods for everyone.
Sociology of environment --- Sociology of the family. Sociology of sexuality --- Private houses --- homosexuality --- domesticity --- Théorie queer --- Homosexualité et architecture --- Espace personnel --- Architecture --- Philosophie --- Homosexuality and architecture --- Domestic space --- Queer theory --- Philosophy --- Gender identity --- Architecture, Domestic --- Space (Architecture) --- Room layout (Dwellings) --- Architecture and homosexuality --- 72:396 --- Théorie queer --- Homosexualité et architecture --- architectuurfilosofie
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Homosexuality still is a taboo subject in architectural history. When historical architectural personalities have lived outside the heterosexual norm, their private lives are readily shrouded in mysterious obscurity. As long as penal laws endured, social existence was constantly threatened and hiding was a necessity. Defensive strategies were needed to protect themselves. To track down these outsiders of the past, historical sources must be read queerly.Wolfgang Voigt, until 2015 deputy director at the Deutsches Architekturmuseum (DAM) in Frankfurt/Main, and architectural historian Uwe Bresan set out on their search and present the results of their research in this book. It brings together 41 portraits from the 18th to the 20th century in North America, Europe and Palestine. The book reveals architects from the Baroque era to the modern age, surprising biographies, admirable houses and, not infrequently, intelligently designed refuges with which the protagonists protected their private lives.
72:396 --- 72.036 --- 72.035 --- 72.039 --- 72.039 Hedendaagse architectuur. Bouwkunst sinds 1960 --- Hedendaagse architectuur. Bouwkunst sinds 1960 --- 72.035 Oude bouwstijlen in de 19e eeuw. Post-renaissance in de architectuur --- Oude bouwstijlen in de 19e eeuw. Post-renaissance in de architectuur --- 72.036 Moderne bouwkunst. Architectuur van de 20e eeuw --- Moderne bouwkunst. Architectuur van de 20e eeuw --- 72(091) --- 72.037 --- 72.038 --- Architecten ; biografieën --- Homoseksualiteit --- Queer people --- Architectuur ; geschiedenis --- Architectuurgeschiedenis ; 18e eeuw --- Architectuurgeschiedenis ; 19e eeuw --- Architectuurgeschiedenis ; 1900 - 1950 --- Architectuurgeschiedenis; 1950-2000 --- Homosexuality and architecture --- Gay artists --- Homosexualité et architecture --- Artistes homosexuels --- History. --- Histoire --- Homosexualité et architecture. --- Artistes homosexuels. --- Architects --- Gays
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Queer Domesticities is about the ways in which queer men have made, experienced and described their homes in London. It is about how they did those things in relation to trenchant stereotypes which cast them as either sissy home boys or domestic outlaws, and in relation also to the immediate pressing contexts of the places they lived through choice or force of circumstance. Matt Cook's book takes queer history indoors and shows additional ways in which queer men orientated their sense of themselves {2013} behind closed doors and apart from the more public bars, clubs, cruising grounds, courtrooms, and protest and pride marches that have more often drawn our attention. In this way it casts in historical perspective the new interest in the home lives and styles of gay men which has come with legal change on civil partnerships, gay marriage and adoption and with TV and media depictions of gay men with particular domestic flair. The book rests on oral histories and unpublished diaries of relatively unknown men and on reassessments of famous and infamous figures, including artists Charles Shannon and Charles Ricketts, architect and romantic socialist C.R.Ashbee, early reformer George Ives, interior designer Oliver Ford, writer and editor J.R.Ackerley, 'stately homo' Quentin Crisp, playwright Joe Orton and film-maker Derek Jarman.
Homosexuality and architecture --- Gay men --- Gays --- Households --- Domestic relations --- Gay couples --- Homosexuels masculins --- Homosexuels --- Ménages (Statistique) --- Familles --- Couples homosexuels --- Homosexualité et architecture --- History --- Family relationships --- Habitations --- Histoire --- Relations familiales --- Droit --- Shannon, Charles, --- Ricketts, Charles S., --- Ashbee, C. R. --- Ives, George, --- Ford, Oliver. --- Ackerley, J. R. --- Crisp, Quentin, --- Orton, Joe. --- Jarman, Derek, --- Gay people
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This book addresses LGBTQ issues in relation to among others law and policy, mobility and migration, children and family, social well-being and identity, visible and invisible landscapes, teaching and instruction, parades, arts and cartography and mapping. A variety of research methods are used to explore identities, communities, networks and landscapes, all which can be used in subsequent research and classroom instruction and disciplinary and interdisciplinary levels. This extensive book stimulates future pioneering research ventures in rural and urban settings about existing and proposed LGBTQ policies, individual and group mapping, visible and invisible spaces, and the construction of public and private spaces. Through the methodologies and rich bibliographies, this book provides a rich source for future comparative research of scholars working in social work, NGOs and public policy, and community networking and development.
Sociology of the family. Sociology of sexuality --- Political sociology --- Politics --- Environmental planning --- Social geography --- ruimtelijke ordening --- politiek --- gender --- Human geography. --- Queer theory --- Sex role --- Sexual minorities --- Homosexuality and architecture --- Gays --- Gender identity --- City and town life --- Sociology, Urban --- Urban minorities --- Géographie sociale --- Rôle selon le sexe --- Théorie queer --- Minorités sexuelles --- Homosexualité et architecture --- Homosexuels --- Identité sexuelle --- Vie urbaine --- Sociologie urbaine --- Minorités en milieu urbain --- Cartography. --- Social conditions. --- Political aspects. --- Cartographie --- Conditions sociales --- Aspect politique --- Gay people --- Sexual minorities. --- Sex distribution (Demography)
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