Shop > Artists' Books

Out of Stock
#05077

Utopie: Texts and Projects, 1967-1978

Date
2011
Publisher
Semiotext(e)
Format
Artists' Books
Details
Hardcover
Size
20 × 23.5 × 3 cm
Length
264 
Description

The short-lived grouping of architects, sociologists, and urbanists known as Utopie, active in Paris from 1967 to 1978, was the product of several factors: the student protests for the reform of architectural education, the unprecedented expansion and replanning of the Parisian urban fabric carried out by the government of Charles de Gaulle, and the domestication of military and industrial technologies by an emerging consumer society. The group’s collaborative publications included the work of Jean Aubert, Isabelle Auricoste, Jean Baudrillard, Catherine Cot, Charles Goldblum, Jean-Paul Jungmann, Henri Lefebvre, Rene Lourau, Antoine Stinco, and Hubert Tonka. Offering a militant alternative to professional urban planning journals, these writers not only formulated a critique of the technocratic and administrative rule over a disabled and alienated urban society but also projected an ephemeral urban poetics.

With ties to the Ecole Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts (ENSBA) in central Paris and to the sociology department established by Henri Lefebvre at the suburban campus of Nanterre, the group challenged postwar modernization and urban planning and questioned the roles into which architects, sociologists, and urban planners had been cast. Utopie makes the group’s diverse body of theoretical work accessible in English for the first time, offering translations of more than twenty key texts. Designed in a facsimile format that follows the innovative graphic layouts of the journals, pamphlets, posters, and articles produced by Utopie, the volume not only provides the first thorough overview of the group’s activities but also seeks to capture Utopie’s linkage of architectural and urban theory to radical publication strategies.

Edited by Craig Buckley and Jean-Louis Violeau.

Translated by Jean-Marie Clarke.

 

Related Items

  1. Schizo-Culture: The Event, The Book - Semiotext(e)
  2. Jesus Days
  3. Trix + Robert Haussmann
  4. Speculative Collaborations
  5. Terence Koh: The Whole Family
  6. The April Memo: A Cultural Notebook
  7. The Bells
  8. TRANSITORY PROJECTS: ACT 2: CHEVY SILVERADO
  9. John Kelsey: Drowning Devourers of the Deep Plane
  10. Jennifer Doyle: Campus Security
  11. Dan Graham: Nuggets: New and Old Writing on Art, Architecture, and Culture
  12. Thomas Henrickson and Martha Henrickson: Awakenings
  13. Instant Coffee and Takuji Kogo: Instant Coffee Year of Love / *Candy Factory Projects
  14. Umbrella: The Anthology
  15. Provence Issue O
  16. Julien Nédélec: To Title
  17. Je n’ai rien à dire. Seulement à montrer. / Ich habe nichts zu sagen. Nur zu zeigen. / I have nothing to say. Only to show. Natalie Czech. Spector Books.
  18. Michael Snow: Scraps for the Soldiers
  19. Setup Issue 3
  20. Setup Issue 2
  21. Raqs Media Collective: Casebook
  22. Gareth Long: Never Odd Or Even
  23. flip Issue 3: Life Jacket Under Seat
  24. Joe Scanlan: RED FLAGS
  25. Institutions by Artists, Volume One
  26. Ruaridh Law and Matt Nish-Lapidus: A Sea of Cogs
  27. Parasitic Ventures Press : Good and Evil
  28. Alex Durlak: A Report/Un Rapport
  29. Double Bound Economies
  30. Cory Arcangel: All the Small Things
  31. Gerry Bibby: The Drumhead
  32. Zuni Halpern: Elephants
  33. Sarah Pierce: Sketches of Universal History Compiled from Several Authors
  34. Air inside the bones, Gonçalo Sena
  35. Myung Feyen, A Book About Some People And Time
  36. Elizabeth LeMoine: Listener and Other Texts
  37. Sarah Butler: For all the Architects