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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Carl R. LounsburyPublisher: University of Virginia Press Imprint: University of Virginia Press Dimensions: Width: 17.80cm , Height: 2.40cm , Length: 25.40cm Weight: 0.762kg ISBN: 9780813931104ISBN 10: 081393110 Pages: 288 Publication Date: 30 October 2011 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Out of Print Availability: In Print ![]() Limited stock is available. It will be ordered for you and shipped pending supplier's limited stock. Table of ContentsReviews<p>Lounsbury has assembled a very original and significant contribution to the field of architectural studies in general and vernacular architecture in particular. This collection of essays is among the first to provide a clear and detailed picture of the architectural history of early America from the perspective of the commonplace and everyday and to make explicit the methodological approach that has overturned the traditional histories.--Donald Linebaugh, University of Maryland author of The Springfield Gas Machine: Illuminating Industry and Leisure, 1860s-1920s "Lounsbury has an admirable command of his subject and he has in this volume brought together well-written and insightful essays that deal with the lessons we can learn from careful investigation of the built environment, not only that of colonial America but also that of other eras and places. The essays here will stand the test of time. --Clifton Ellis ""JSAH "" Lounsbury has assembled a very original and significant contribution to the field of architectural studies in general and vernacular architecture in particular. This collection of essays is among the first to provide a clear and detailed picture of the architectural history of early America from the perspective of the commonplace and everyday and to make explicit the methodological approach that has overturned the traditional histories. --Donald Linebaugh, University of Maryland ""author of The Springfield Gas Machine: Illuminating Industry and Leisure, 1860s-1920s "" Talk about Johnny-on-the-spot. If there was ever a scholar who reliably turns up in the right places at the right time, it has to be architectural historian Carl Lounsbury. This attractive volume of his collected essays finds him Present at the Creation when the ""new architectural history"" moved south from New England to Virginia, the Carolinas, and Georgia, present at the archaeological rediscovery of Jamestown, present to record the battered remains of historic Charleston in the aftermath of Hurricane Hugo, and, most of all, present for the latest round of research and restoration at Colonial Williamsburg. Reading these pages is to ride in the vanguard of early American architectural scholarship for the past forty years. --Cary Carson, Colonial Williamsburg Foundation Lounsbury has assembled a very original and significant contribution to the field of architectural studies in general and vernacular architecture in particular. This collection of essays is among the first to provide a clear and detailed picture of the architectural history of early America from the perspective of the commonplace and everyday and to make explicit the methodological approach that has overturned the traditional histories.--Donald Linebaugh, University of Maryland ""author of ""The Springfield Gas Machine: Illuminating Industry and Leisure, 1860s-1920s"" "" Talk about Johnny-on-the-spot. If there was ever a scholar who reliably turns up in the right places at the right time, it has to be architectural historian Carl Lounsbury. This attractive volume of his collected essays finds him Present at the Creation when the ""new architectural history"" moved south from New England to Virginia, the Carolinas, and Georgia, present at the archaeological rediscovery of Jamestown, present to record the battered remains of historic Charleston in the aftermath of Hurricane Hugo, and, most of all, present for the latest round of research and restoration at Colonial Williamsburg. Reading these pages is to ride in the vanguard of early American architectural scholarship for the past forty years.--Cary Carson, Colonial Williamsburg Foundation" Lounsbury has an admirable command of his subject and he has in this volume brought together well-written and insightful essays that deal with the lessons we can learn from careful investigation of the built environment, not only that of colonial America but also that of other eras and places. The essays here will stand the test of time. --Clifton Ellis JSAH Lounsbury has assembled a very original and significant contribution to the field of architectural studies in general and vernacular architecture in particular. This collection of essays is among the first to provide a clear and detailed picture of the architectural history of early America from the perspective of the commonplace and everyday and to make explicit the methodological approach that has overturned the traditional histories. --Donald Linebaugh, University of Maryland author of The Springfield Gas Machine: Illuminating Industry and Leisure, 1860s-1920s Talk about Johnny-on-the-spot. If there was ever a scholar who reliably turns up in the right places at the right time, it has to be architectural historian Carl Lounsbury. This attractive volume of his collected essays finds him Present at the Creation when the new architectural history moved south from New England to Virginia, the Carolinas, and Georgia, present at the archaeological rediscovery of Jamestown, present to record the battered remains of historic Charleston in the aftermath of Hurricane Hugo, and, most of all, present for the latest round of research and restoration at Colonial Williamsburg. Reading these pages is to ride in the vanguard of early American architectural scholarship for the past forty years. --Cary Carson, Colonial Williamsburg Foundation Lounsbury has assembled a very original and significant contribution to the field of architectural studies in general and vernacular architecture in particular. This collection of essays is among the first to provide a clear and detailed picture of the architectural history of early America from the perspective of the commonplace and everyday and to make explicit the methodological approach that has overturned the traditional histories.--Donald Linebaugh, University of Maryland author of The Springfield Gas Machine: Illuminating Industry and Leisure, 1860s-1920s Talk about Johnny-on-the-spot. If there was ever a scholar who reliably turns up in the right places at the right time, it has to be architectural historian Carl Lounsbury. This attractive volume of his collected essays finds him Present at the Creation when the new architectural history moved south from New England to Virginia, the Carolinas, and Georgia, present at the archaeological rediscovery of Jamestown, present to record the battered remains of historic Charleston in the aftermath of Hurricane Hugo, and, most of all, present for the latest round of research and restoration at Colonial Williamsburg. Reading these pages is to ride in the vanguard of early American architectural scholarship for the past forty years.--Cary Carson, Colonial Williamsburg Foundation <p>Talk about Johnny-on-the-spot. If there was ever a scholar whoreliably turns up in the right places at the right time, it has to be architecturalhistorian Carl Lounsbury. This attractive volume of his collected essays finds himPresent at the Creation when the new architectural history moved south from NewEngland to Virginia, the Carolinas, and Georgia, present at the archaeologicalrediscovery of Jamestown, present to record the battered remains of historicCharleston in the aftermath of Hurricane Hugo, and, most of all, present for thelatest round of research and restoration at Colonial Williamsburg. Reading thesepages is to ride in the vanguard of early American architectural scholarship for thepast forty years.--Cary Carson, Colonial Williamsburg Foundation Author InformationCarl R. Lounsbury, Architectural Historian at the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation, is the author of The Courthouses of Early Virginia: An Architectural History and An Illustrated Glossary of Early Southern Architecture and Landscape (both Virginia). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |