Product Details
Far from Equilibrium: Essays on Technology and Design Culture

Far from Equilibrium: Essays on Technology and Design Culture
By Sanford Kwinter

List Price: $33.00
Price: $21.78 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com

32 new or used available from $21.78

Average customer review:

Product Description

Sanford Kwinter ponders the complex encounters between technology, culture, and architecture. Critical essays offer an extended meditation on infrastructure, war, computation, mechanical and material intelligence, and other multivariate facets of modernity. Far-reaching in scope, Far from Equilibrium amounts to a performance in writing of what Kwinter describes as radical anamnesis: the imagination's escape from the sterile logic of what is. Compiling over a decade of architectural and critical writings, many published here for the first time, Far From Equilibrium is essential reading for anyone interested in the state of architecture and criticism today. A primer for (re)thinking design in the 21st century.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #303772 in Books
  • Published on: 2008-03-15
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 196 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
A great point of departure if you re willing to re-think design in the new millenium. --LODOWN Magazine

A great point of departure if you re willing to re-think design in the new millenium. --LODOWN Magazine

Far from Equilibrium is one of those rare works, an insider s critique. --Artforum

In a distinctly Kwinter-esque voice of commentary, reflection and critique, Far From Equilibrium delivers us ever closer to the possibility of a renewal of thought relating to practices and issues architectural. --Architectural Review.-- Its seductive appearance aside, I was struck by how formative Kwinter's work has been in my thinking and in architecture culture as a whole over the last two decades. It's a must-buy. --Kazys Varnelis

Sanford Kwinter is among the most influential architectural theorists of his generation...blasting theoretically informed polemic at a post-industrial world... Far From Equilibrium is an undeniably bracing and enlivening volume. --Icon Magazine

About the Author
Sanford Kwinter is a New York-based writer. He teaches design at the School of Architecture, Rice University.


Customer Reviews

Far from Equilibrium offers a compelling and engaging set of brilliant, but mildly egotistic explications of technology's place 5
With a refreshing sense of urgency and vigor, Kwinter launches a series of polemical expositions against the cold and sterilizing tenets of a dehumanized establishment. With a radical subversiveness befitting the guerilla orators of some underground movement, the book decries a slew of outdated practices and fallacious world-views from neoconservative fundamentalism to empty formalism. It resituates technology and design within the cultural economy of the human life-world, favoring the infinite, indeterminate potential of computational open systems over the mechanistic and rationalized landscapes of deterministic despotism. As well as espousing democracy and human meaning, Kwinter clamors for a return to the emergent, material logics of reality, positing architecture as the investigative research of true formal processes. He expounds on philosophy, advanced mathematics, history, and contemporary culture, condemning mainstream myopia while seeking overlooked, eccentric heroes. Neither the old guard nor the latest fads of our overly self-glorifying profession can hide from Kwinter's critiques. A thorough reading of these serious, almost cynical, partially disillusioning topics, however, does not lack an optimism and sense of humor as the charm and delight of encountering such a vast academic wit (that at times teeters on arrogance) gives way to calls for bright potentials in historical transformation. As a collection of essays and lectures, the work sometimes lacks the depth and rigor needed to completely derail its opposition on a basis beyond the author's eloquent and mesmerizing, yet still opinionated proclamations. But the eye-opening text proves a must read for any student, practitioner, academic, or lover of intellectual ponderings who seeks an examination of architecture, technology, and society's current course.