This book explores how landscape, as an idea, a visual medium and a design practice, is organized, appropriated and framed in the transformation of global cities and environments.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Foreword:
Murray Fraser
Introduction:
Ed Wall and Tim Waterman
Chapter 1: Landscapes of Post-History
Ross Adams
Chapter 2: Reciprocal Landscapes: Material Portraits in New York City and Elsewhere
Jane Hutton
Chapter 3: Agency, Advocacy, Vocabulary: Three Landscape Projects
Jane Wolff
Chapter 4: The Law is at Fault? Landscape Rights and 'Agency' in International Law
Amy Strecker
Chapter 5: How to Live in a Jungle: the (Bio)politics of the Park as Urban Model
Maria Giudici
Chapter 6: Planetary Aesthetics
Peg Rawes
Chapter 7: The Closed Landscapes of Sverdlovsk-44 and Krasnoyarsk-26
Katya Larina
Chapter 8: Rhythm, Agency, Scoring and the City
Paul Cureton
Chapter 9: Publicity and Propriety: Democracy and Manners in Britain's Public Landscape
Tim Waterman
Chapter 10: The Power of the Incremental: Agronomic Investment in Lisbon's Chelas Valley
Jill Desimini
Chapter 11: Post-Landscape or the Potential of Other Relations with the Land
Ed Wall
Chapter 12: Activating Equitable Landscapes and Critical Design Assemblages in Bangkok
Camillo Boano and William Hunter
Chapter 13: Agency and Artifice in the Environment of Neoliberalism
Doug Spencer
Afterword: Landscape's Agency
Don Mitchell