<p>'If, to Dieter Rams, good design is environmentally friendly, good design history is environmentally aware. Design history thrives when it interrogates the environmental complexities of human creations, and environmental historians can learn much of human behavior from design history. The essays in <i>The Culture of Nature in the History of Design</i> draw upon design histories of landscapes, communities, buildings, and materials around the world as different cultures, economic systems, and movements of resistance moved to create the new, create anew, to transform the discarded, and to reimagine the possible. The cumulative effect is a multifaceted conversation that systematically and profoundly examines the history of design’s entanglements with nature, a conversation that promises to inspire important discussions in the future.'</p><p> – Carl A. Zimring, author of <i>Aluminum Upcycled: Sustainable Design in Historical Perspective</i></p><p>'The essays collected in <i>The Culture of Nature in the History of Design </i>offer fresh insights into environments and the objects that populate them. Its authors examine topics ranging from Victorian ecotopias to thermonuclear shelters, the totemic materiality of consumer goods to cybernetic mapping, desert and hydropower landscapes to "garbage housing" and cultures of D.I.Y. making, and experiments in postwar design pedagogy spanning continents and political systems. The volume’s vivid mosaic of theoretically grounded essays challenges readers to reconsider humanity’s making (and unmaking) of nature and the built environment.'</p><p> – Greg Castillo, College of Environmental Design, University of California, Berkeley</p><p>"The book is a significant offering, providing some valuable insights into where, why and how the history of design can contribute towards understanding humanity’s evolving, and increasingly catastrophic, impacts on the global environment … Its signal achievement is to create a licit space for historians of design to openly explore some of the most significant details of the recent past of ‘sustainable design’, whose history is still poorly understood and rather overshadowed by contemporary ideological preoccupations … the book’s linkage of this history to the more open theme of the ‘culture of nature’ ends up being a refreshing and rewarding one." </p><p> – Robert Crocker, Deputy Director, China Australia Centre for Sustainable Development, UniSA Creative, University of South Australia, Adelaide, Australia</p>
Produktdetaljer
Biographical note
Kjetil Fallan is Professor of Design History at the University of Oslo and a founding member of the Oslo School of Environmental Humanities. He is the author of Designing Modern Norway: A History of Design Discourse (2017) and Design History: Understanding Theory and Method (2010), editor of Scandinavian Design: Alternative Histories (2012), and co-editor, with Grace Lees-Maffei, of the book series Cultural Histories of Design as well as the volumes Designing Worlds: National Design Histories in an Age of Globalization (2016) and Made in Italy: Rethinking a Century of Italian Design (2014).