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The Language of landscape

Spirn, Anne Whiston Unknown Yale University Press (New Haven, 1998) (eng) English 9780300082944 Unknown Unknown LANDSCAPE ASSESSMENT; Unknown This eloquent and powerful book combines poetry and pragmatism to teach the language of landscape. Anne Whiston Spirn, author of the award-winning The Granite Garden: Urban Nature and Human Design, argues that the language of landscape exists with its own syntax, grammar, and metaphors, and that we imperil ourselves by failing to learn to read and speak this language. To understand the meanings of landscape, our habitat, is to see the world differently and to enable ourselves to avoid profound aesthetic and environmental mistakes. Offering examples that range across thousands of years and five continents, Spirn examines urban, rural, and natural landscapes. She discusses the thought of renowned landscape authors-Thomas Jefferson, Frank Lloyd Wright, Frederick Law Olmsted, Lawrence Halprin-and of less well known pioneers, including Australian architect Glenn Murcutt and Danish landscape artist C. Th. Sorensen. She discusses instances of great landscape designers using landscape fluently, masterfully, and sometimes cynically. And, in a probing analysis of the many meanings of landscape, Spirn shows how one person's ideal landscape may be another's nightmare, how Utopian landscapes can be dark. There is danger when we lose the connection between a place and our understanding of it, Spirn warns, and she calls for change in the way we shape our environment, based on the notions of nature as a set of ideas and landscape as the expression of action and ideas in place.

Physical dimension
viii, 326 p. 24 cm. ill.

Summary / review / table of contents

Prologue: The Yellowwood and the Forgotten Creek --
1. "Nature's Infinite Book": The Language of Landscape.
1. Dwelling and Tongue: The Language of Landscape.
2. Survival and Imagination: Reading and Telling the Meanings of Landscape.
3. Artful Telling, Deep Reading: The Literature of Landscape --

2. "Without Form and Void" to "Heaven and Earth": Landscape Composition.
4. Is a Path Like a Noun, Flowing Like a Verb? Elements of Landscape and Language.
5. Dynamic Weaving, Fabric of Stories: Shaping Landscape Context.
6. Rules of Context: Landscape Grammar --

3. Using the Language of Landscape: Pragmatics, Poetics, and Polemics.
7. Shaping: Pragmatics of Landscape Expression.
8. A Rose Is Rarely Just a Rose: Poetics of Landscape.
9. Polemical Landscapes --
Epilogue: Reimagining Mill Creek.


Copies
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00518/21 712 Spi L Library - 7th Floor Available