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OverviewBuilding Access investigates twentieth-century strategies fordesigning the world with disability in mind. Illustrated with a wealth of rarearchival materials, this book brings together scientific, social, and politicalhistories in what is not only the pioneering critical account of UniversalDesign but also a deep engagement with the politics of knowing, making, andbelonging in twentieth-century United States. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Aimi HamraiePublisher: University of Minnesota Press Imprint: University of Minnesota Press Dimensions: Width: 17.80cm , Height: 3.80cm , Length: 25.40cm ISBN: 9781517901646ISBN 10: 1517901642 Pages: 336 Publication Date: 01 November 2017 Audience: General/trade , Professional and scholarly , General , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Temporarily unavailable ![]() The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you. Table of ContentsContents Preface Introduction: Critical Access Studies 1. Normate Template: Knowing-Making the Architectural Inhabitant 2. Flexible Users: From the Average Body to a Range of Users 3. All Americans: Disability, Race, and Segregated Citizenship 4. Sloped Technoscience: Curb Cuts, Critical Frictions, and Disability (Maker) Cultures 5. Epistemic Activism: Design Expertise as a Site of Intervention 6. Barrier Work: Before and After the Americans with Disabilities Act 7. Entangled Principles: Crafting a Universal Design Methodology Conclusion: Disability Justice Acknowledgments Notes IndexReviewsBuilding Access is a seminal text that will be received with acclaim and become well-known for its reconstruction of how we think about access, disability, and design. --Rob Imrie, Goldsmiths University of London Aimi Hamraie gifts us with a rare kind of book, one that skillfully weaves critical disability studies together with technology studies and architectural history to unpack the American project of designing and making built environments purportedly usable by all. They ask us to think harder about who counts as the everyone of Universal Design, and how knowledge of body variability is created. Crucially, the book probes the ways disability access politics is deeply entangled with race through whiteness, bodily norms, activism, and practices material segregation. Anyone who cares about the built environment, technoscience, or disability politics will want to read this important book. --Michelle Murphy, University of Toronto Building Access is a seminal text that will be received with acclaim and become well-known for its reconstruction of how we think about access, disability, and design. -Rob Imrie, Goldsmiths University of London Aimi Hamraie gifts us with a rare kind of book, one that skillfully weaves critical disability studies together with technology studies and architectural history to unpack the American project of designing and making built environments purportedly usable by all. They ask us to think harder about who counts as the everyone of Universal Design, and how knowledge of body variability is created. Crucially, the book probes the ways disability access politics is deeply entangled with race through whiteness, bodily norms, activism, and practices material segregation. Anyone who cares about the built environment, technoscience, or disability politics will want to read this important book. -Michelle Murphy, University of Toronto Building Access is a persuasive, beautiful, and intrepidly researched book. -New Books Network Hamraie's skill in detailing the struggle, triumphs and ironies of this history makes this book a valuable addition to any critical architecture reading list. -Journal of Design History Building Access is a seminal text that will be received with acclaim and become well-known for its reconstruction of how we think about access, disability, and design. -Rob Imrie, Goldsmiths University of London Aimi Hamraie gifts us with a rare kind of book, one that skillfully weaves critical disability studies together with technology studies and architectural history to unpack the American project of designing and making built environments purportedly usable by all. They ask us to think harder about who counts as the everyone of Universal Design, and how knowledge of body variability is created. Crucially, the book probes the ways disability access politics is deeply entangled with race through whiteness, bodily norms, activism, and practices material segregation. Anyone who cares about the built environment, technoscience, or disability politics will want to read this important book. -Michelle Murphy, University of Toronto Author InformationAimi Hamraie is assistant professor of Medicine, Health, and Society and American studies at Vanderbilt University. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |