02803nam 2200517 450 991046025170332120200520144314.0(CKB)3710000000270880(EBL)3387591(SSID)ssj0001370799(PQKBManifestationID)12456630(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001370799(PQKBWorkID)11297942(PQKB)10531359(MiAaPQ)EBC3387591(Au-PeEL)EBL3387591(CaPaEBR)ebr10959864(OCoLC)923340597(EXLCZ)99371000000027088020130304h20132013 uy| 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrPamphlet architecture 33 islands & atolls /LCLA Office, Luis CallejasFirst [edition].New York :Princeton Architectural Press,[2013]©20131 online resource (80 p.)Pamphlet architecture ;33Description based upon print version of record.1-61689-142-4 ""Content""; ""Introduction""; ""Tactical Archipelago""; ""Venice Lagoon""; ""Rio Olympic Park""; ""Lake Park""; ""In conversation with Mason White""; ""Floodings""; ""In conversation with Geoff Manaugh""; ""Weatherfield""; ""Welcome to Fleetwood""; ""Clouds""; ""Airplot""; ""Afterward"""The competition for Pamphlet Architecture 33 asked previous authors in the series to nominate the architects and theorists whose work represents the most exciting design and research in the field today. The first of two winning entries--the other will be published in fall 2013 as PA 34--was submitted by Luis Callejas of LCLA Office in Medellín, Colombia. Pamphlet Architecture 33: Islands, Atolls, and Other Derivative Territories asks how architecture might critically repurpose its traditionally limited disciplinary tools in order to make a meaningful impact at a territorial scale. Functioning as a landscape architect in a country that has no infrastructure for such a profession, Callejas questions pedagogical, disciplinary, and political norms at macro levels using micro tactics. As a result, PA 33 provocatively expands devices such as repetition and aggregation beyond their limits in scenarios where sociopolitical constraints seemingly prohibit what would normally be understood as an architectural intervention"--Provided by publisher.Pamphlet architecture ;33.Electronic books.724/.7Callejas Luis1981-992397MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910460251703321Pamphlet architecture 332272405UNINA03413oam 22005534a 450 991014044420332120241204160954.0(CKB)2670000000557916(SSID)ssj0001684388(PQKBManifestationID)16517046(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001684388(PQKBWorkID)15045304(PQKB)11133339(WaSeSS)IndRDA00056730(OCoLC)1176454919(MdBmJHUP)muse87140(oapen)https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/29327(oapen)doab29327(EXLCZ)99267000000055791620200721e20202013 uy 0engurm|#||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierThe Non-LibraryTrevor Owen JonesBrooklyn, NYpunctum books2014Baltimore, Maryland :Project Muse,2020©20201 online resource (84 pages) illustrations; PDF, digital file(s)Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: MonographPrint version: 9780615945446 Includes bibliographical references (pages 81-84).Author's intentions -- Prolegomena -- Derrida's archive -- Fichte -- Parabiography -- Badiou, Borges, Bataille -- Meditations -- The non-Virgil."I have been forced to become . . . a librarian."--Georges Bataille. The Non-Library is a non-standard expression for life that is lived without mediation from words, images, or even ideas. While a thing called "the Library" continues to terrorize humanity even as it enters its last stages as a consequence of cataclysmic climate change and late capitalism, the Non-Library is a strictly performative, ahistorical immanence that suspends the Library's insistent calls to categorization, representation, and reification. Of course, to describe or circumscribe such ineffability has its limits, but it also has its thresholds to cross: with commentary on Derrida's Archive Fever, a deconstruction of Fichte, a parabiographical meditation on librarianship, and a vamping on the possible "Non-Virgil," The Non-Library gently proposes a negative capability in liminal spaces in order to best escape and resist the Library's stranglehold on human knowledge and its requisite social imaginations."Let us now descend into the blind world . . . ." --Dante. Building on the non-standard thought of Francois Laruelle's non-philosophy, while not beholden to it, The Non-Library attempts to leave the discourse of the university behind and uses its citations of Badiou, Borges, Bataille, and Dante instead to construct a philo-fiction more akin to the immanence of music and its many expressions rather than Philosophy's demand that all questions be eventually answered, that the Real is ultimately thinkable, or that all of Life might possibly be contained in the Library.Library sciencePhilosophyLibrariesPhilosophyElectronic books. Library sciencePhilosophy.LibrariesPhilosophy.027.001Jones Trevor Owen802588Project Muse,MdBmJHUPMdBmJHUPBOOK9910140444203321Non-Library1803903UNINA