LEADER : 00000nam 2200000uu 4500 |
008 230919s2016||||th 000 0 eng d |
020 ^a9789492095190 |
050 4 ^aNK1175^b.R47 2016 |
240 30 ^aHistory of design ideology for the future |
245 04 ^aThe responsible object :^ba history of design ideology for the future /^cMarjanne van Helvert (ed.) ; with contributions by Andrea Bandoni, Ece Canli, Alison J. Clarke, Éva Forgács, Marjanne van Helvert, Susan R. Henderson, Ed van Hinte, Elizabeth Carolyn Miller, Luiza Prado de O. Martins, & Pedro J.S. Vieira de Oliveira |
300 ^a288 pages :^billustrations ;^c24 cm |
504 ^aIncludes bibliographical references (pages 270-278) andindex |
505 00 ^aIntroduction : A design history for the future /^rMarjanne van Helvert --^tWilliam Morris, arts and crafts,and the idea of eco-socialist design /^rElizabeth Carolyn Miller --^tA political education : the historical legacy of the German Bauhaus and the Moscow VkhUTEMAS /^rÉva Forgács --^tMargarete Schütte-Lihotzky : a career in the design politics of the everyday /^rSusan R. Henderson --^tGood design for everyone : scarcity, equality, and utility in the Second World War /^rMarjanne van Helvert --^tDesign for consumer society : planned obsolescence, styling, and irresponsible objects /^rMarjanne van Helvert--^tThe Buckminster Fuller mission /^rEd van Hinte --^tThehumanitarian object : Victor Papanek and the struggle for responsible design /^rAlison J. Clarke --^tCounterculture and anti-design : postmodern appropriations of Utopia /^rMarjanne van Helvert --^tDesign history interrupted : a queer-feminist perspective /^rEce Canlı --^tThe digital age reaches the fringes : a public fab lab in Brazil and its (possible) implications for design /^rAndrea Bandoni --^tIf not tomorrow, then today : paradigms of Latin American design /^rLuiza Prado de O. Martins & Pedro J. S.Vieira de Oliveira --^tResponsible objects, utopian desires : a two-sided monologue on the future of design /^rMarjanne van Helvert |
520 8 ^aWhat would future archaeologists think of our time, ifthey were to dig in the places that used to house our civilization? They would discover countless dumpsites of things we threw away: plastic and metal objects, still smouldering heaps of discarded electronics, synthetic textiles, and other things that do not decompose within a foreseeable amount of time. They would find the leftovers of an age of rampant, imperishable objects. Today, in an economic system that revolves around producing and consuming these objects, we are starting to review their role in a series of challenges that lie ahead of us. In the design discipline, sustainability and social responsibility have become prolific epithets, generating new products, materials, and technologies, designed to change the course of our future. The intrinsic design ideologies are often not new, but form a fundamental part of design history, reappearing throughout the previous centuries. This book presents a history of socially committed design strategies within the western design tradition, from William Morris to Victor Papanek, and fromVKhUTEMAS to FabLab |
650 0 ^aDesign^xHistory |
655 7 ^aHistory. |
700 1 ^aHelvert, Marjanne van,^eeditor. |
700 1 ^aBandoni, Andrea,^eauthor |
700 1 ^aCanli, Ece, De author |
700 1 ^aClarke, Alison J.,^eauthor. |
700 1 ^aForgács, Éva,^eauthor. |
700 1 ^aHenderson, Susan R.,^d1951-^eauthor. |
700 1 ^aHinte, Ed van,^d1951-^eauthor. |
700 1 ^aMiller, Elizabeth Carolyn,^eauthor |
700 1 ^aMartins, Luiza Prado de O.,^eauthor |
700 1 ^aOliveira, Pedro J.S. Vieira de.,^eauthor |
999 ^aปวีนา ภู่ทอง |