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A History of American Architecture: Buildings in Their Cultural and Technological Context

A History of American Architecture: Buildings in Their Cultural and Technological Context
By Mark Gelernter

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Product Description

A richly illustrated history of American architecture that explains why particular architectural ideas occurred when and where they did.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #502130 in Books
  • Published on: 2001-07-01
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 368 pages

Editorial Reviews

From Library Journal
Gelernter (Univ. of Colorado, Denver) adds to the constellation of concise histories of American architecture while trying to refrain "from a traditional form of architectural writing that stressed connoisseurship." He is more successful with cultural than technological context. Throughout, he stresses European precedents, though the illustrations are not always well placed for optimal comparison. There are several refreshing and original inclusions of more vernacular examples as illustrations of the broad influence of styles. But despite Gelernter's argument in their favor, his illustrations are perhaps the book's greatest liability. Sometimes, as with the Monadnock Building, the author overlooks the key technological significance of the building. Although his summaries are at times substantive, Gelernter's expression of them can be less than elegant. His work does not eclipse the central position of Leland Roth's A Concise History of American Architecture (1979) or Vincent Scully's American Architecture and Urbanism (1969), both of which exhibit more polished writing, more thorough analysis, and more expansive thinking.APaul Glassman, New York Sch. of Interior Design Lib.
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Review
"A complete history of American architecture would fill a bookcase, but one can gain a strong understanding of this fascinating and challenging subject from this excellent survey." --APT Bulletin: The Journal of Preservation Technology

"Here is a comprehensive work for undergraduates containing more history and ideas than most. Gelernter offers crisp line drawings among the 289 illustrations . . . Ideology and history surrounding American buildings is included throughout, as are useful reviews of history from the ancient Greeks up through American settlement . . . effective coverage of most American architecture and the ideas that shaped it."--Choice

"Gelernter covers a broad range of intellectual as well as architectural history."--Boston Book Review

Review
"This significant and needed book provides for the first time a useful and manageable historic framework for survey courses whose purpose is to teach the history of American architecture and not merely its connoisseurship. In a manner noteworthy for its even-handedness and avoidance of quirks of taste, it constructs a comprehensive and accurate historical armature with an architectural perspective on which discussions of specific buildings can readily be hung." (Glenn Andres, Middlebury College )


Customer Reviews

Great overview of architectural history4
I picked up this book at the library as a refresher on history while studying for the Architect's Registration Exam. It covers so much European architecture too that it exceeded my expectations. Much easier to read over a few days than the usual textbooks like Trachtenberg's, and I'm doing very well on history-related practice questions now. The choices of buildings covered in this book are great and there are city plans and floor plans. Starting each chapter with an analysis of the culture and philosophy of the era made me really understand how architectural styles developed and keeps everything in order in my memory.

A clearly written interesting history.5
This is easy reading with appropos illustrations. Just the right amount of detail for the traveller who is interested in architecture.

Context is everything4
I found Mr. Gelernter's book in the public library as I was researching a project. After reading it, I thought it was so useful that I decided to buy it for my own library.

Many art and architecture books are just recitations of dry facts, dates and theories, with no historical or sociological context. Not so Gelernter's "A History of American Architecture."

The correlation of buildings with their context, and the inclusion of early Native American architecture, make this a thought provoking introduction to the history of architecture in America.