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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Ana MiljackiPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.920kg ISBN: 9781138208179ISBN 10: 1138208175 Pages: 326 Publication Date: 02 February 2017 Audience: Professional and scholarly , College/higher education , Professional & Vocational , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Hardback 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 ContentsReviews'Original and engaging, Miljacki's rigorous study of Czech coldwar buildings, projects and texts is a cogently argued case for 'lifestyle' as the means by which to frame our understanding of Socialist architecture. Parsing coldwar ideology from reality, The Optimum Imperative not only gives fresh insight into this fascinating period in Czech architecture and its ideas of lifestyle, but this essential text will significantly revise our wider understanding of Socialist architectural production, history and theory. Grounding the projects in their time and place, Miljacki offers the reader remarkable insight into a set of ideas and a body of architectural work otherwise not available to an English-speaking audience.' - Robin Schuldenfrei, The Courtauld Institute of Art, University of London The Optimum Imperative makes an absolutely vital contribution to understanding the historical arc of the twentieth century. With her vivid excavation of the imaginings, the practicalities, and the achievements of the architectural profession in Czechoslovakia, Miljacki has revealed the defining role of a longed-for socialist lifestyle. The architectural optimism toward the socialist project that this rigorous theoretical inquiry brings into view captivates the reader with a sense of rediscovering the dormant narratives of twentieth-century experience. - Timothy Hyde, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Crafted with conceptual sophistication and an impressive empirical knowledge, Miljacki's three phase discussion of Czech architectural discourses on socialist lifestyle between Munich and Normalization is a major contribution. Of true interest far beyond the narrow circle of Bohemists and/or historians of architecture, this book demonstrates not only that it is important and intellectually rewarding to study the history of socialist ideas but also that socialist thought is a rich and highly complex matter even under communist rule. - Gyoergy Peteri, Professor of Contemporary European History, Norwegian University of Science & Technology, Trondheim, Norway 'Original and engaging, Miljacki's rigorous study of Czech coldwar buildings, projects and texts is a cogently argued case for 'lifestyle' as the means by which to frame our understanding of Socialist architecture. Parsing coldwar ideology from reality, The Optimum Imperative not only gives fresh insight into this fascinating period in Czech architecture and its ideas of lifestyle, but this essential text will significantly revise our wider understanding of Socialist architectural production, history and theory. Grounding the projects in their time and place, Miljacki offers the reader remarkable insight into a set of ideas and a body of architectural work otherwise not available to an English-speaking audience.' - Robin Schuldenfrei, The Courtauld Institute of Art, University of London The Optimum Imperative makes an absolutely vital contribution to understanding the historical arc of the twentieth century. With her vivid excavation of the imaginings, the practicalities, and the achievements of the architectural profession in Czechoslovakia, Miljacki has revealed the defining role of a longed-for socialist lifestyle. The architectural optimism toward the socialist project that this rigorous theoretical inquiry brings into view captivates the reader with a sense of rediscovering the dormant narratives of twentieth-century experience. - Timothy Hyde, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Crafted with conceptual sophistication and an impressive empirical knowledge, Miljacki's three phase discussion of Czech architectural discourses on socialist lifestyle between Munich and Normalization is a major contribution. Of true interest far beyond the narrow circle of Bohemists and/or historians of architecture, this book demonstrates not only that it is important and intellectually rewarding to study the history of socialist ideas but also that socialist thought is a rich and highly complex matter even under communist rule. - Gyoergy Peteri, Professor of Contemporary European History, Norwegian University of Science & Technology, Trondheim, Norway 'Original and engaging, Miljacki's rigorous study of Czech coldwar buildings, projects and texts is a cogently argued case for 'lifestyle' as the means by which to frame our understanding of Socialist architecture. Parsing coldwar ideology from reality, The Optimum Imperative not only gives fresh insight into this fascinating period in Czech architecture and its ideas of lifestyle, but this essential text will significantly revise our wider understanding of Socialist architectural production, history and theory. Grounding the projects in their time and place, Miljacki offers the reader remarkable insight into a set of ideas and a body of architectural work otherwise not available to an English-speaking audience.' - Robin Schuldenfrei, The Courtauld Institute of Art, University of London The Optimum Imperative makes an absolutely vital contribution to understanding the historical arc of the twentieth century. With her vivid excavation of the imaginings, the practicalities, and the achievements of the architectural profession in Czechoslovakia, Miljacki has revealed the defining role of a longed-for socialist lifestyle. The architectural optimism toward the socialist project that this rigorous theoretical inquiry brings into view captivates the reader with a sense of rediscovering the dormant narratives of twentieth-century experience. - Timothy Hyde, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Crafted with conceptual sophistication and an impressive empirical knowledge, Miljacki's three phase discussion of Czech architectural discourses on socialist lifestyle between Munich and Normalization is a major contribution. Of true interest far beyond the narrow circle of Bohemists and/or historians of architecture, this book demonstrates not only that it is important and intellectually rewarding to study the history of socialist ideas but also that socialist thought is a rich and highly complex matter even under communist rule. - Gyorgy Peteri, Professor of Contemporary European History, Norwegian University of Science & Technology, Trondheim, Norway Author InformationAna Miljački is Associate Professor of Architecture at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA, where she teaches history, theory, and design. She holds a PhD (2007) in history and theory of architecture from Harvard University, USA, and her work focuses on the relationship between politics and the products and circumstances of architectural labor. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |