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Architecture as metaphor : language, number, money / Kojin Karatani ; translated by Sabu Kohso ; edited by Michael Speaks.
LIBRA AC146 .K321313 1995
Available from offsite location
Fine Arts Library AC146 .K321313 1995
By Request
- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Karatani, Kōjin, 1941-
- Series:
- Writing architecture
- Standardized Title:
- Inʼyu to shite no kenchiku. English
- Language:
- English
- Japanese
- Physical Description:
- xlv, 199 pages : illustrations ; 21 cm.
- Place of Publication:
- Cambridge, Mass. ; London, Eng. : MIT Press, 1995.
- Summary:
- In Architecture as Metaphor, Karatani detects a recurrent "will to architecture" that he argues is the foundation of all Western thinking, traversing architecture, philosophy, literature, linguistics, city planning, anthropology, political economics, psychoanalysis, and mathematics. In the three parts of the book, he analyzes the complex bonds between construction and deconstruction, thereby pointing to an alternative model of "secular criticism", but in the domain of philosophy rather than literary or cultural criticism. As Karatani claims in his introduction, because the will to architecture is practically nonexistent in Japan, he must first assume a dual role: one that affirms the architectonic (by scrutinizing the suppressed function of form) and one that pushes formalism to its collapse (by invoking Kurt Godel's incompleteness theorem). His subsequent discussions trace a path through the work of Christopher Alexander, Jane Jacobs, Gilles Deleuze, and others. Finally, amidst the drive that motivates all formalization, he confronts an unbridgeable gap, an uncontrollable event encountered in the exchange with the other; thus his speculation turns toward global capital movement. While in the present volume he mainly analyzes familiar Western texts, it is precisely for this reason that his voice discloses a distance that will add a new dimension to our English-language discourse.
- Notes:
- Includes bibliographical references.
- ISBN:
- 0262611139
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