Synopses & Reviews
Design Studies: A Reader is the ideal entry point for any student who wants to understand the many complex roles of design--as process, product, function, symbol, and use. Reflecting the diverse range of perspectives on design, the reader brings together over 70 key texts. The essays are presented in themed sections covering history, methods, theory, visuality, identity, consumption, labor, industrialization, new technology, sustainability, and globalization. Each section is separately introduced and each concluded with a guide to further reading. Authors include: Theodor Adorno, Arjun Appadurai, Rayner Banham, Jean Baudrillard, Pierre Bourdieu, Cheryl Buckley, Michel de Certeau, Margaret Crawford, Michel Foucault, Buckminster Fuller, Paul du Gay, Erving Goffman, Donna Haraway, John Chris Jones, Guy Julier, Naomi Klein, Ezio Manzini, Victor Margolin, and many others. In addition, a final section of specially commissioned essays analyzes 10 seminal designs of the 20th Century, from Helvetica to the cell phone. Bringing together the best classic and contemporary writing,
Design Studies: A Reader will be invaluable to all students of Design as well as to students of Architecture, Art, Material Culture and Sociology.
Synopsis
Design Studies: A Reader is the ideal entry point for any student who wants to understand the many complex roles of design--as process, product, function, symbol, and use.
Reflecting the diverse range of perspectives on design, the reader brings together over 70 key texts. The essays are presented in themed sections covering history, methods, theory, visuality, identity, consumption, labor, industrialization, new technology, sustainability, and globalization. Each section is separately introduced and each concluded with a guide to further reading.
Authors include: Theodor Adorno, Arjun Appadurai, Rayner Banham, Jean Baudrillard, Pierre Bourdieu, Cheryl Buckley, Michel de Certeau, Margaret Crawford, Michel Foucault, Buckminster Fuller, Paul du Gay, Erving Goffman, Donna Haraway, John Chris Jones, Guy Julier, Naomi Klein, Ezio Manzini, Victor Margolin, and many others. In addition, a final section of specially commissioned essays analyzes 10 seminal designs of the 20th Century, from Helvetica to the cell phone.
Bringing together the best classic and contemporary writing, Design Studies: A Reader will be invaluable to all students of Design as well as to students of Architecture, Art, Material Culture and Sociology.
About the Author
Hazel Clark is Chair of the Dept. of Art and Design Studies and David Brody is Assistant Professor of Design Studies, both at Parsons the New School for Design, New York. Hazel Clark is co-editor of Old Clothes, New Looks: Second Hand Fashion and The Fabric of Cultures: Fashion, Identity and Globalization. David Brody's forthcoming book is Visualizing Empire: Orientalism and American Imperialism in the Philippines.
Table of Contents
* Annotated Guide to Further Reading * SECTION V: LABOR, INDUSTRIALIZATION AND NEW TECHNOLOGY * Section Introduction * V.1: LABOR AND THE PRODUCTION OF DESIGN * Part Introduction * 50. John Styles, Manufacturing Consumption and Design * 51. Paul du Gay, et al, The Sony Walkman * 52. Stuart Walker, Integration of Scale * V.2: INDUSTRIALIZATION AND POST INDUSTRIALIZATION * Part Introduction * 53. David Brett, Drawing and the Ideology of Industrialization * 54. Margaret Crawford, The 'New' Company Town * 55. Frederick Winslow Taylor, The Principles of Scientific Management * 56. Abraham Moles, Design and Immateriality * V.3: NEW DESIGN AND NEW TECHNOLOGIES * Part Introduction * 57. Bradley Quinn, Hussein Chalayan, Fashion and Technology * 58. Donald Norman, What's Wrong with the PC? * 59. Vicente Rafael, The Cell Phone and the Crowd * 60. Theodor Adorno, Do Not Knock * Annotated Guide to Further Reading * SECTION VI: DESIGN AND GLOBAL ISSUES * Section Introduction * VI.1: GLOBALIZATION * Part Introduction * 61. Arjun Appadurai, Modernity at Large * 62. Hugh Aldersey-Williams, Globalism, Nationalism, and Design * 63. Guy Julier, Responses to Globalisation * VI.2: EQUALITY AND SOCIAL JUSTICE * Part Introduction * 64. Kate Stohr, Self-Help and Sites-and Services Programs * 65. John Hockenberry, The Re-Education of Michael Graves * 66. Ezio Manzini, A Cosmopolitan Localism * 67. Earl Tai, Design Justice * VI.3: SUSTAINABILITY * Part Introduction * 68. William McDonough and Michael Braungart