Migrant Housing: Architecture, Dwelling, Migration

Author:   Mirjana Lozanovska (Senior Lecturer, Deakin University, Australia)
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9780367524982


Pages:   260
Publication Date:   12 May 2020
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Migrant Housing: Architecture, Dwelling, Migration


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Author:   Mirjana Lozanovska (Senior Lecturer, Deakin University, Australia)
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Weight:   0.480kg
ISBN:  

9780367524982


ISBN 10:   0367524988
Pages:   260
Publication Date:   12 May 2020
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Tertiary & Higher Education
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Tracing the post war emigration of unprivileged migrants to affluent economies, Lozanovska's Migrant Housing expertly uncovers human networks and material conditions otherwise neglected in architectural studies, powerfully demonstrating the built environment's capacity for recording and representing the migrant condition. Her captivating metaphor of the 'twin house', imagined, created and adapted in sending as well as recipient sites conjures a transcultural poetic across national borders that emerges as equally viable and intellectually stimulating as other situated representations of home or dwelling. Anoma Pieris, University of Melbourne, Australia Two distant places - the village of Zavoj (Republic of Macedonia) and the suburbs of Melbourne (Australia) - are tied together through the will, aspiration and luck of migration. As ties between them thicken and thin over time, the homes and neighbourhoods in each place expand and contract. Migrant Housing builds a compelling account of this unlikely reciprocity, and weaves around it a rich and far-reaching set of reflections on migration and its formative role in shaping contemporary cities . Stephen Cairns, editor of Drifting: Architecture and Migrancy (Routledge 2004), Singapore


Tracing the post war emigration of unprivileged migrants to affluent economies, Lozanovska's Migrant Housing expertly uncovers human networks and material conditions otherwise neglected in architectural studies, powerfully demonstrating the built environment's capacity for recording and representing the migrant condition. Her captivating metaphor of the 'twin house', imagined, created and adapted in sending as well as recipient sites conjures a transcultural poetic across national borders that emerges as equally viable and intellectually stimulating as other situated representations of home or dwelling. Anoma Pieris, University of Melbourne, Australia Two distant places - the village of Zavoj (Republic of Macedonia) and the suburbs of Melbourne (Australia) - are tied together through the will, aspiration and luck of migration. As ties between them thicken and thin over time, the homes and neighbourhoods in each place expand and contract. Migrant Housing builds a compelling account of this unlikely reciprocity, and weaves around it a rich and far-reaching set of reflections on migration and its formative role in shaping contemporary cities . Stephen Cairns, editor of Drifting: Architecture and Migrancy (Routledge 2004), Singapore This multidisciplinary and cross-cultural research makes a major contribution to architecture and migration studies. D. A. Chekki, emeritus, University of Winnipeg, CHOICE March 2020 This book is a must read for anyone interested in the intersection between migration and architecture. Luce Beeckmans, Ghent University, Belgium, excerpt from A tale of two twin houses, ABE Journal [Online], 17 | 2020, http://journals.openedition.org/abe/7893 Migrant Housing: Architecture, Dwelling, Migration makes an important contribution toward reimagining a multivalent history of migrant architecture created in response to the particularities of place and determined by the agency of the actors who produce it. Its fine-grained research, employing a diversity of systems of knowledge, serves as an exemplar for high-quality writings on the built environment, self-consciously disassembling the purported certainties of more simplistic morphological readings. Manu Sobti, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, excerpt from Traditional Dwellings and Settlements Review


Author Information

Mirjana Lozanovska is Associate Professor at Deakin University, Australia. Her research deploys multidisciplinary theories of space to examine mobility and exchange and its impact on architecture, diversity and culture, and the reinvention of the city. She has published widely on migration and architecture, and is editor of the anthology, Ethno-Architecture and the Politics of Migration (2016).

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