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New Geographies 11: Extraterrestrial

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

New Geographies 11: Extraterrestrial

Contributors:

By (Author) Jeffrey Nesbit
Edited by Guy Trangos

ISBN:

9781948765503

Publisher:

Actar Publishers

Imprint:

Actar Publishers

Publication Date:

11th August 2020

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Architecture
Yearbooks, annuals, almanacs
Teaching of a specific subject

Dewey:

520

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

176

Dimensions:

Width 201mm, Height 251mm, Spine 18mm

Weight:

590g

Description

New Geographies 11: Extraterrestrial explores the historical and contemporary consequence of our planetary relationship with space. It interprets this duality through the conceptual lens of extraterrestrial, which engages an entangled zone of expanding practices in geography, landscape, and architecture, stretching Earth to space, and conversely, space to Earth. This issue questions the means through which space is forged as a condition extra to our own terra. Complicit within this imagination resides a deep political and economic logic that serves to territorialize outer space as an exception to, and extension of, Earth. These critical processes are revealed as not extra at all, but rather distinctly of terra. Through a series of written, photographic, and representational investigations, this edition of New Geographies builds on earlier studies of outer space from science, technology and society, as well as from the design disciplines, history, and critical geography. It reinforces the need for humanitys changing relationship with outer space to be recorded, critiqued, and theorized from a breadth of academic traditions and projected within design discourse. This issue brings together experts contributing to the social, political, and cultural imaginary implicit in extraterrestrial. Three primary thematic territorial devices structure these explorations: a technologically constructed space between, a material culture constructed and discharged, and a space politically and economically reflective, all revealed through historical and contemporary society.

New Geographies is a journal of design, agency, and territory founded, edited, and produced by Doctor of Design candidates at the Harvard University Graduate School of Design. New Geographies presents the geographic as a design paradigm that links physical, representational, and political attributes of space and articulates a synthetic scalar practice. Through critical essays and projects, the journal seeks to position designs agency amid concerns about infrastructure, technology, ecology, and globalization.

With Contributions of Rachel Armstrong, Katarzyna Balug, Nicholas de Monchaux, Daniel Daou, Rajji Sanjay Desai, Edward Eigen, Rania Ghosn and El Hadi Jazairy, Mariano Gomez-Luque, Gretchen Heefner, Elizabeth A. Kessler, Scott Kirsch, Julie Michelle Klinger, Neil Leach, Michael Light, Lisa Messeri, Roland Miller, Alessandra Ponte, an interview with Kim Stanley Robinson, David Salomon, Felicity D. Scott, Fred Scharmen, Neyran Turan, edited by Jeffrey S. Nesbit andGuyTrango.

Author Bio

Jeffrey S. Nesbit is an architect, urbanist, and doctoral candidate at Harvard University Graduate School of Design. His research focuses on processes of urbanization and the urban landscape. Currently, his dissertation explores the 20th century spaceport complex through the lens of architecture, technology, and aerospace history. Nesbit has written a number of journal articles and book chapters on infrastructural urbanization and is editor of Chasing the City: Models for Extra-Urban Investigations (Routledge, 2018) and editor of New Geographies 11: Extraterrestrial (Actar, 2019). Guy Trangos is a doctor of design candidate at the Harvard University Graduate School of Design. He is a founding partner in Meshworks Architecture and Urbanism and editor of New Geographies 11: Extraterrestrial (Actar, 2019). His doctoral research investigates the infrastructural, spatial, and political implications of large science projects on landscapes and society. Guy has written widely for various publications and journals and edited the book Movement Johannesburg (The City, 2015) with Zahira Asmal. Guy holds a MSc in city design and social science from the London School of Economics and Political Science and a master of architecture (professional) from the University of the Witwatersrand.

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