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Design Roots: Culturally Significant Designs, Products and Practices [Kõva köide]

Edited by , Edited by , Edited by , Edited by , Edited by (Nottingham Trent University, UK)
  • Formaat: Hardback, 400 pages, kõrgus x laius: 244x169 mm, kaal: 835 g, 40 bw illus
  • Ilmumisaeg: 08-Feb-2018
  • Kirjastus: Bloomsbury Academic
  • ISBN-10: 1474241794
  • ISBN-13: 9781474241793
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 400 pages, kõrgus x laius: 244x169 mm, kaal: 835 g, 40 bw illus
  • Ilmumisaeg: 08-Feb-2018
  • Kirjastus: Bloomsbury Academic
  • ISBN-10: 1474241794
  • ISBN-13: 9781474241793
Teised raamatud teemal:

Design Roots provides a comprehensive review of culturally significant designs, products and practices which are rooted to particular communities through making tradition and a sense of place. Many rich traditional practices associated with community, tacit knowledge and culture are being rapidly lost due to globalisation and urbanisation. Yet they have much to offer for the future in terms of sustainability, identity, wellbeing and new opportunities in design.

This book considers the creative roots, the place-based ecologies, and deep understandings of cultural significance, not only in terms of history and tradition but also in terms of locale, social interactions, innovation, and change for the sustainment of culturally significant material productions. Importantly, these are not locked in time by sentimentality and nostalgia but are evolving, innovative, and adaptive to new technologies and changing circumstances.

Contributing authors explore the historical roots of culturally significant designs, products and practices, emerging directions, amateur endeavours, enterprise models, business opportunities and the changing role and contribution of design in the creation of material cultures of significance, meaning and value.

An international perspective is provided through case studies and research from North and South America, Africa, Europe, Asia and Australasia, with examples including Aran jumper production in Northern Ireland, weaving in Thailand, Iranian housing design, Brazilian street design and digital crafting in the United Kingdom.

Arvustused

I savoured each bite-size essay and its ideas until the elephant was consumed. I then sat back and enjoyed the satisfaction of an admirable accomplishment. I would recommend this edited volume to thinking practitioners and researchers looking for inspiration it is full of ideas worth pursuing. It takes head on a large challenge and offers illumination along a path forward. * Design Journal * Craft has deep roots and heritage but these material skills and ways of working are just as relevant today as they were centuries ago. Critical writing on craft, such as Design Roots, is crucial to ensure it continues to evolve and thrive. * Rosy Greenlees OBE, Executive Director of the Crafts Council, UK * 5 / 5 stars

Engaging, insightful read for anyone with an interest in traditional craft or sustainable design.

This book offers broad appeal to creatives and academics alike, focusing on the cultural significance of traditional craft and the potential for sustainability in a globalising world.

Preliminary chapters introduce the key concepts and theoretical foundations of the book in a highly readable style. The cultural significance of designs, products and practices is deconstructed and situated within the context of a globalising world. Despite the apparent homogenisation of culture resulting from economic drivers such as trade, technology and urbanisation, the book charts a resurgence of the traditional, the situated, the local. Crucially, tradition is recognised as perpetually transforming and further, as potentially transformative, offering implications for sustainability in the recreation of a meaningful material culture.

Drawing on research from across the world, a series of engaging case studies provide context to the discussion presented in the opening chapters. For example, the revelation of surprising myths surrounding the culturally significant |Aran jumper provide useful insight into the construction of authenticity and tradition and the study of Oltu-stone prayer bead production not only examines reasons for the loss of traditional handicrafts but also the potential for sustainability.

Further case studies focus on examples of the revitalisation of culturally significant designs, products and practices. The potential of culture as a resource and design as a tool for sustainable development is examined. Importantly, the role and responsibility of the designer in transforming tradition is deliberated.

The following series of case studies included in the book consider the broader context, examining structural factors that support revitalisation through design, detailing contemporary approaches to development.

The final section is dedicated to the future, with emphasis on the role of design and the use of contemporary strategies, in the successful revitalisation of culturally significant designs, products and practices.

Overall, this book roots well-considered theory in a wealth of relevant, contextual research, offering an engaging, insightful read to anyone with an interest in traditional craft or sustainable design. * Florence J. Logan, www.amazon.co.uk *

Muu info

A timely, comprehensive survey of culturally significant designs, products and practices and their positive role in the future of material cultures drawing on a wide range of case studies from around the world.
List of Illustrations
viii
Notes on Contributors xiv
Editorial Introduction 1(6)
Stuart Walker
PART I Culturally Significant Designs, Products, and Practices
7(56)
Editorial Introduction
9(2)
Martyn Evans
1 Creative Ecologies
11(14)
Jeyon Jung
Stuart Walker
2 Forging New Futures
25(14)
Amy Twigger Holroyd
3 Culturally Significant Artifacts and their Relationship to Tradition and Sustainability
39(12)
Stuart Walker
4 Making and its Cultural Ecological Foundations
51(12)
Patrick Dillon
PART II Authenticity and Tradition in Material Culture
63(64)
Editorial Introduction
65(2)
Amy Twigger Holroyd
5 The Aran Jumper
67(12)
Siun Garden
6 Chok Weaving and Textile Enterprises
79(14)
Disaya Chudasri
7 Oltu-stone Prayer Beads
93(12)
Hazal Gumus Ciftci
8 The Mian-Sara
105(12)
Poone Yazdanpanah
Stuart Walker
9 IKEA
117(10)
Sara Kristoffersson
PART III Revitalization by Design
127(72)
Editorial Introduction
129(2)
Tom Cassidy
10 Culture as a Resource for a Sustainable Future in Indigenous Communities
131(16)
Anne Marchand
Karine Awashish
Christian Coocoo
Solen Roth
Renata Marques Leitao
Cedric Sportes
Caoimhe Is ha Beaule
11 Transforming Tradition in Indonesia
147(16)
Adhi Nugraha
12 New Translations of South Korean Patterns
163(14)
Meong Jin Shin
13 Revitalization by Design
177(12)
Sebastian Cox
14 New Caribbean Design
189(10)
Patty Johnson
PART IV Enterprise, Policy and Education for Positive Development
199(72)
Editorial Introduction
201(2)
Jeyon Jung
15 Sustaining Culturally Significant Designs, Products, and Practices
203(16)
Jacques Giard
16 Accidents, Intentions, Movements, and Makers
219(12)
Steve Marotta
Austin Cummings
Charles Heying
17 The Role of Higher Education in Sustaining Culturally Significant Crafts in Estonia
231(12)
Sirpa Kokko
18 The Challenge of Intellectual Property Rights for Culturally Significant Patterns, Products, and Processes
243(12)
Tom Cassidy
Tracy Diane Cassidy
19 The Case of the City Different
255(16)
Marsha C. Bol
PART V Design Futures
271(89)
Editorial Introduction
273(4)
Stuart Walker
Martyn Evans
20 Research Approaches for Culturally Significant Design
277(14)
Tom Cassidy
21 Digital Transformations, Amateur Making, and the Revitalization of Traditional Textile Crafts
291(14)
Amy Twigger Holroyd
22 Design for Social Innovators
305(14)
Anna Meroni
Daniela Selloni
23 Integrated Scales of Design and Production for Sustainability with a Focus on Graduate Design Work in Lighting
319(12)
Cagla Dogan
24 Designing Authentic Brands
331(10)
Emma Murphy
25 Strategies for Revitalization of Culturally Significant Designs, Products, and Practices
341(19)
Martyn Evans
Amy Twigger Holroyd
Stuart Walker
Tom Cassidy
Jeyon Jung
Index 360
Stuart Walker is Professor of Design for Sustainability at Lancaster University, UK.

Martyn Evans is Professor of Design at Manchester Metropolitan University, UK.

Tom Cassidy is Chair of Design at the University of Leeds, UK.

Jeyon Jung is Research Associate at Lancaster University, UK.

Amy Twigger Holroyd is Senior Lecturer at Nottingham Trent University, UK.