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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Thomas Barrie (School of Architecture, North Carolina State University, USA)Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 0.390kg ISBN: 9781138947184ISBN 10: 1138947180 Pages: 186 Publication Date: 08 March 2017 Audience: College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly , Undergraduate Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() 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. Table of ContentsPrologue | The Problem of House and Home | Topics, Themes, and Analytical Methods 1. Homelessness and Homecoming | Cultural Contexts, Ontological Roles, and the Task of Architecture 2. A Home in the World | House and Home in Literature 3. Origins | Stories and Theories about the First House 4. Sacred Domesticities | Houses for Divinity, Divinity of Home 5. House Tombs | Domestic Abodes and Memorials 6. Materializing the Immaterial | The House as a Means of Self-exploration and Expression 7. Domestic Ideologies | Modernism, Postmodernism, and the House 8. Domestic Cultures | The Twentieth-century House and Suburb Epilogue | Making a Home in the World Notes IndexReviewsWith this book Thomas Barrie offers us neither a guide to how to build, nor a history of domestic architecture, nor a survey of significant houses, although a concern with all three informs his discussion of house and home. At issue is something more fundamental: the need for both physical and spiritual shelter that is inseparable from human being; the way houses and thoughts about houses, especially in literature, have articulated changing convictions concerning how human beings should take their place in the world, how they should relate to an encompassing reality, to others, and to themselves. Aware of the countless directions such articulations have taken, of the historical roots of our idealization of the suburban home, Barrie does not attempt to formulate some other ideal that would provide our building with a direction; instead his study of house and home calls attention to timeless themes that responsible building must consider, such as the tension between the need to be placed and the demands of freedom, between the need for privacy and the need for community, the place of the dead in our lives, the bond that ties the domestic to the sacred. Thus he has given us a prolegomenon to responsible building. - Karsten Harries, Howard H. Newman Professor of Philosophy, Yale University, USA In this learned study, Thomas Barrie takes us beyond contemporary civilization's limited and individualistic assumptions of home and house as mere bastions of privacy, to reveal how the concepts respond to our human need for meaning - for dwelling in place and with others. His meditations through diverse historical and topical examples are invaluable for anyone concerned with building and inhabiting a world resonant with humanity's existential questions. - Alberto Perez-Gomez, author and professor, McGill University, Montreal, Canada With this book Thomas Barrie offers us neither a guide to how to build, nor a history of domestic architecture, nor a survey of significant houses, although a concern with all three informs his discussion of house and home. At issue is something more fundamental: the need for both physical and spiritual shelter that is inseparable from human being; the way houses and thoughts about houses, especially in literature, have articulated changing convictions concerning how human beings should take their place in the world, how they should relate to an encompassing reality, to others, and to themselves. Aware of the countless directions such articulations have taken, of the historical roots of our idealization of the suburban home, Barrie does not attempt to formulate some other ideal that would provide our building with a direction; instead his study of house and home calls attention to timeless themes that responsible building must consider, such as the tension between the need to be placed and the demands of freedom, between the need for privacy and the need for community, the place of the dead in our lives, the bond that ties the domestic to the sacred. Thus he has given us a prolegomenon to responsible building. - Karsten Harries, Howard H. Newman Professor of Philosophy, Yale University, USA In this learned study, Thomas Barrie takes us beyond contemporary civilization's limited and individualistic assumptions of home and house as mere bastions of privacy, to reveal how the concepts respond to our human need for meaning - for dwelling in place and with others. His meditations through diverse historical and topical examples are invaluable for anyone concerned with building and inhabiting a world resonant with humanity's existential questions. - Alberto Perez-Gomez, author and professor, McGill University, Montreal, Canada Author InformationThomas Barrie, AIA is Professor of Architecture at North Carolina State University, USA. His scholarship focuses on alternative histories of architecture and, in particular, the interrelationship of a culture’s religious beliefs and socio-political agendas, and the communicative and ritual roles of the built environment. He is the author of The Sacred In-Between: The Mediating Roles of Architecture (Routledge, 2010), and Spiritual Path, Sacred Place: Myth Ritual and Meaning in Architecture (Shambhala, 1996), and co-editor of Architecture, Culture, and Spirituality (Barrie, Bermudez, and Tabb, Ashegate, 2015). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |