ABSTRACT

This book examines the relationship between social practices and built space, focusing on current cooperative/participative and posthuman approaches to its production and management. From a social-cultural-and-ecological perspective, it explores the modes of engagement of all factors in the constitutional processes of inhabited space.

Throughout this interdisciplinary collection, built space is reconsidered in the light of other schools of thought such as philosophy, anthropology, social sciences and political theories and practices. It covers new ground at conceptual, epistemic and methodological levels, focusing on inhabited space from within the framework of globalisation, biopolitics, cultural changes, environmental crisis and new technologies. Organised into three parts, Parts 1 and 2 focus on the role of architects in the emergence of a new ethos for habitation, as well as the modalities of the inclusion of differences in design, discussing the importance of participation and narrative at a theoretical and practical level in architecture. In the third part, the chapters delve into questions regarding the intersection of design, ecology and technoscience in a posthuman approach, which might support the inclusion of differences in design and the emergence of a new environmental ethos.

Providing a stimulating landscape of arguments and challenges to new readings of architecture, society and the environment, this book will be of interest to researchers, students and professionals of architecture, urban planning, anthropology and philosophy.

part I|42 pages

Timeless connections between society and builtscape

chapter |2 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|15 pages

Public ethics and moral significance of landscape

Political correlations, bodily emancipation and neoteric bourgeois identity

chapter 2|11 pages

Letters: 1519, 1796, 2020

The architect's public discourse

part II|80 pages

Contemporary interweavings

chapter |3 pages

Introduction

chapter 4|14 pages

Revisiting the practices and ethics of participatory design

Learning from contemporary Latin American examples

chapter 5|12 pages

Co-design in real time

Research and design in Brussels and Valparaiso

chapter 7|19 pages

Architectural toolbar and art of dwelling

Antagonistic antinomies of a spatial ethos

chapter 8|15 pages

Spatial plots

Three epistemological models

part III|99 pages

Contemporary interweavings

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

chapter 9|16 pages

Acting and spatial framing

Towards a political topology of the Terrestrial

chapter 10|8 pages

Space, biopolitics and democracy

chapter 11|18 pages

Eco-phenomenology and environmental ethics

Observations on topos with reference to Stalker by Andrey Tarkovsky

chapter 14|17 pages

‘Posthuman’ architecture

Contemporary approaches of the human, technology and nature within the built environment