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Building sex : men, women, architecture, and the construction of sexuality / Aaron Betsky.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: New York : William Morrow, [1995]Copyright date: ©1995Edition: First editionDescription: xix, 236 pages : illustrations ; 25 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 0688131670
  • 9780688131678
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Online version:: Building sex.; Online version:: Building sex.DDC classification:
  • 720.82 23
LOC classification:
  • NA2543.W65 B48 1995
Contents:
Of penises and tents -- Spaces of domination, tricks of domesticity -- Crossroads and crypts -- The romance of other spaces -- Erecting perfection -- The gilded cage -- The discreet places of the bourgeoise -- At home in the maelstrom of modernity -- Constructing sex.
Summary: Buildings have always been an expression of human sexuality. In this book, architecture critic and curator Aaron Betsky takes a look at the man-made world and concludes that it is just that: made by men and not women. The structure of buildings and the layout of cities in the modern world have almost always been determined by men, and the abstract and alien order of grids and columns that has resulted imprisons us in a way of living based on repression and, in some cases, oppression. By contrast, it is women who create the interior spaces within these man-created environments. Comfortable, beautiful, seductive, and logical, these interiors act as areas of escape, self-definition, and sometimes even revelation. Drawing on a wide range of architectural examples, from African mud huts to modern apartment complexes, Betsky explores what effects this division of architectural labor has had on our sensibilities and, indeed, on how we relate to one another as men and women. He believes that although it has always been thus, we do not have to live within this dichotomy between the exterior and the interior, the made and the lived, the masculine and the feminine, forever. It is possible, says Betsky, to create "spaces of liberation, spaces in which we can re-construct our selves and our world."
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book City Campus City Campus Main Collection 720.82 BET (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available A562163B

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Of penises and tents -- Spaces of domination, tricks of domesticity -- Crossroads and crypts -- The romance of other spaces -- Erecting perfection -- The gilded cage -- The discreet places of the bourgeoise -- At home in the maelstrom of modernity -- Constructing sex.

Buildings have always been an expression of human sexuality. In this book, architecture critic and curator Aaron Betsky takes a look at the man-made world and concludes that it is just that: made by men and not women. The structure of buildings and the layout of cities in the modern world have almost always been determined by men, and the abstract and alien order of grids and columns that has resulted imprisons us in a way of living based on repression and, in some cases, oppression. By contrast, it is women who create the interior spaces within these man-created environments. Comfortable, beautiful, seductive, and logical, these interiors act as areas of escape, self-definition, and sometimes even revelation. Drawing on a wide range of architectural examples, from African mud huts to modern apartment complexes, Betsky explores what effects this division of architectural labor has had on our sensibilities and, indeed, on how we relate to one another as men and women. He believes that although it has always been thus, we do not have to live within this dichotomy between the exterior and the interior, the made and the lived, the masculine and the feminine, forever. It is possible, says Betsky, to create "spaces of liberation, spaces in which we can re-construct our selves and our world."

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