Analogue: A Field Guide
By (Author) Deyan Sudjic
Quarto Publishing PLC
Frances Lincoln
21st May 2024
14th March 2024
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
History of design
History of engineering and technology
609
Hardback
304
Width 210mm, Height 270mm
750g
A celebration of all things analogue, from the machines that made it work-reel-to-reel tape recorders, typewriters, and telephones-to the artefacts and the culture that they made possible Recent years have seen an ever-growing wave of interest in this subject and there is a gap in the market for a complete, multi-category field guide. The book taps into an analogue renaissance-a gathering nostalgia for physical, real-world interaction with design and technology and a desire to reconnect with both things and people, something that has been eroded by the digital. The multi-category approach of this book enables it to show the deeper cultural and social significance of the analogue era with the authority to convince those who know a lot about each category and the breadth to attract the non-specialist. As well as tapping into the nostalgia market, there is also an appeal to those who collect, use and maintain these older technologies. The wide range of objects and images in this book, coupled with the text by leading design historian Deyan Sudjic, make this a standout title.
Deyan Sudjic is Director Emeritus of the Design Museum, London, and Professor of Design Studies at the University of Lancaster, UK. His books have been published in 12 languages and are highly acclaimed-the Washington Post named the Edifice Complex book of the year. BBC Radio 4 serialized his B is for Bauhaus as Book of the Week. Formerly the architecture critic for The Observer newspaper and editor of Domus magazine in Milan, Deyan is now contributing editor for Wallpaper* and writes for the Financial Times, Prospect, and The New York Times.