An Anthropology of Architecture

Buchli, Victor
An Anthropology of Architecture
2013, Bloomsbury


Abstract 
Ever since anthropology has existed as a discipline, anthropologists have thought about architectural forms. This book provides the first overview of how anthropologists have studied architecture and the extraordinarily rich thought and data this has produced.
With a focus on domestic space – that intimate context in which anthropologists traditionally work – the book explains how anthropologists think about public and private boundaries, gender, sex and the body, the materiality of architectural forms and materials, building technologies and architectural representations. Each chapter uses a broad range of case studies from around the world to examine from within anthropology what architecture \’does\’ – how it makes people and shapes, sustains and unravels social relations.
An Anthropology of Architecture is key reading for students of anthropology, material culture, geography, sociology, architectural theory, design and city planning.

Table of Contents
Preface
Chapter 1: The Long Nineteenth Century: Collecting Primitive Huts and Thinking Through Origins
Chapter 2: Architecture and Archaeology
Chapter 3: Social Anthropology and the House Societies of Levi-Strauss
Chapter 4: Institutions and Community
Chapter 5: Consumption Studies and the Home
Chapter 6: Embodiment and Architectural Form
Chapter 7: Anthropology, Representation and Architecture
Chapter 8: Iconoclasm, Decay and the Destruction of Architectural Forms
Postscript
Bibliography
Index

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