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Placemaking: Routledge Library Editions: Ethnoscapes

Autor David Stea, Mete Turan
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 2 feb 2026
Originally published in 1993, this is a book about the context of placemaking – the production of vernacular architecture and settlement. It is an attempt at prototheory, the formation of a perspective with which to view built environment produced by traditional societies.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781032864402
ISBN-10: 1032864400
Pagini: 400
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 mm
Greutate: 0.57 kg
Editura: Taylor & Francis Ltd.
Seria Routledge Library Editions: Ethnoscapes


Cuprins

New Series Introduction to the Reissue David Canter and David Stea.  Foreword by Anthony King.  Preface.  Acknowledgments.  List of Illustrations.  Introduction: A Critical Overview  1. Breaking Ground for Placemaking  2. Sheltering Landscapes and Vicarious Housing  3. From Shelter to Settlement  4. Urbanization in the Neolithic  5. Cliff Hangers and Troglodytes  6. Beyond Impressions: Structuring an Explanation  7. Understanding Placemaking: The Anatolians and the Anasazi  8. Reconstruction: Toward New Foundations.  Appendix 1: Anasazi Abandonments and the “Mesoamerican Connection”.  Appendix 2: Transitions in Modes of Production: Alternative Models of Social Change.  Bibliography.  Index.

Notă biografică

David Stea is Professor Emeritus of Geography and International Studies at Texas State University and Research Associate with the Center for Global Justice in Mexico. As Carnegie Interdisciplinary Fellow at Brown University from 1964 to 1966, he developed the new field of Environmental Psychology and the related study of spatial and geographic cognition. David is a member of the editorial boards of a number of journals, the co-author or co-editor of several books and author of some 150 articles and book chapters on various subjects, including sustainable development and environmental issues in Latin America. In 1987 he was nominated for the Right Livelihood Prize (also known as the “alternative Nobel”) for his international work with indigenous peoples. 
Mete Turan taught structural and architectural design for more than fifty years in Architecture Schools at different universities, among them Middle East Technical University in Turkey, Harvard, Carnegie Mellon, University of New Mexico, University of Michigan in the US, and has now retired from Roger Williams University. His current interests are in philosophy and architectonics.