| Nota di contenuto |
Frontmatter -- Contents -- Illustrations -- INTRODUCTION National Design Histories in an Age of Globalization -- CHAPTER 1 Designs on/in Africa -- CHAPTER 2 Does Southern African Design History Exist? -- CHAPTER 3 Designing the South African Nation From Nature to Culture -- CHAPTER 4 Resisting Global Homogeneity but Craving Global Markets: Kiwiana and Contemporary Design Practice in New Zealand -- CHAPTER 5 Creativity within a Geographical-National Framework: From Modern Japanese Design to Pevsner’s Art Geography -- CHAPTER 6 Imagining the Indian Nation: The Design of Gandhi’s Dandi March and Nehru’s Republic Day Parade -- CHAPTER 7 Troubled Geography: Imagining Lebanon in 1960s Tourist Promotion -- CHAPTER 8 Czech Glass or Bohemian Crystal? The Nationality of Design in the Czech Context -- CHAPTER 9 The Myth of Danish Design and the Implicit Claims of Labels -- CHAPTER 10 Altering a Homogenized Heritage: Articulating Heterogeneous Material Cultures in Norway and Sweden -- CHAPTER 11 A Special Relationship: The UK–US Transatlantic Domestic Dialogue -- CHAPTER 12 Surveying the Borders ‘Authenticity’ in Mexican-American Food Packaging, Imagery and Architecture -- CHAPTER 13 An Empire of One’s Own: Individualism and Domestic Built Form in Twenty-First-Century Jamaica -- CHAPTER 14 The Quest for Modernity: A Global/National Approach to a History of Design in Latin America -- CHAPTER 15 Of Coffee, Nature and Exclusion: Designing Brazilian National Identity at International Exhibitions (1867 and 1904) -- Index
|