Research Catalog

Unplanned visitors : queering the ethics and aesthetics of domestic space

Title
Unplanned visitors : queering the ethics and aesthetics of domestic space / Olivier Vallerand.
Author
Vallerand, Olivier, 1981-
Publication
Montreal ; Kingston ; London ; Chicago : McGill-Queen's University Press, [2020]

Items in the Library & Off-site

Filter by

1 Item

StatusFormatAccessCall NumberItem Location
TextUse in library NA2543.H65 V35 2020Off-site

Details

Description
x, 246 pages : illustrations; 25 cm
Summary
"Sexuality and gender have long been influential in understanding the construction of domestic space, its meanings, often revealing a binary division of private and public, female and male. By reconstructing the foundation of queer critiques of space and by analyzing the representation of domesticity in contemporary art and architecture, Unplanned Visitors shows the blurring of private and public that can occur in any domestic space and explores the potential of queer theory for understanding, and designing, the built environment. Olivier Vallerand investigates how queer critiques, building on pioneering feminist work, question the relation between identity and architecture and highlight normative constructs underlying domestic spaces. He draws out a genealogy of queer space in theoretical discourse in architecture, studying projects by Mark Robbins, Joel Sanders, J Mayer H, Elmgreen & Dragset, Andrés Jaque, and MYCKET, among others. Those works blur the traditional borders between architecture and art to emphasise the tensions between private and public and their impact on assumptions about domestic space and family structure. The challenges in moving from experimental installations to built environments suggest how designers must acknowledge and respond to the social contexts that shape architecture, rethinking how domestic spaces can be designed to allow everyone to better manage how their self-identification is expressed through their living environments. Unplanned Visitors poses a challenge to traditional architectural theory and history, but also suggests a renewed and more inclusive ethics whereby designers explicitly address social and political power structures. The potential of a queer approach to architectural design, history, theory, and education is precisely to enact a method that creates more inclusive buildings and safer neighbourhoods for everyone."--
Subject
  • Homosexuality and architecture
  • Architecture > Philosophy
  • Domestic space
  • Queer theory
Bibliography (note)
  • Includes bibliographical references and index.
Call Number
NA2543.H65
ISBN
  • 0228001854
  • 9780228001850
  • 9780228001843
  • 0228001846
LCCN
40030024344
OCLC
  • on1126211821
  • 1126211821
  • SCSB-14615548
Owning Institutions
Columbia University Libraries