Design Studies
A Reader
Design Studies
A Reader
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Design Studies: A Reader is the ideal entry point for any student who wants to understand the many complex roles of design - as process, product, function, symbol, and use. Reflecting the diverse range of perspectives on design, the reader brings together over seventy key texts. The essays are presented in themed sections covering history, methods, theory, visuality, identity, consumption, labor, industrialization, new technology, sustainability, and globalization. Each section is separately introduced and each concludes with a guide to further reading. In addition, a final section of…mehr
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Design Studies: A Reader is the ideal entry point for any student who wants to understand the many complex roles of design - as process, product, function, symbol, and use. Reflecting the diverse range of perspectives on design, the reader brings together over seventy key texts. The essays are presented in themed sections covering history, methods, theory, visuality, identity, consumption, labor, industrialization, new technology, sustainability, and globalization. Each section is separately introduced and each concludes with a guide to further reading. In addition, a final section of specially commissioned essays analyzes ten seminal designs of the twentieth century, from Helvetica to the cell phone. Bringing together the best classic and contemporary writing, Design Studies: A Reader will be invaluable to all students of Design as well as to students of Architecture, Art, Material Culture, and Sociology. Authors include: Theodor Adorno, Arjun Appadurai, Reyner Banham, Jean Baudrillard, Zygmunt Bauman, Pierre Bourdieu, Cheryl Buckley, Michel de Certeau, Margaret Crawford, Arthur C Danto, Adrian Forty, Michel Foucault, Buckminster Fuller, Paul du Gay, Erving Goffman, Donna Haraway, Dick Hebdige, John Chris Jones, Guy Julier, Naomi Klein, Ezio Manzini, Victor Margolin, Karl Marx, Daniel Miller, Victor Papanek, Nikolaus Pevsner, John Styles, and John Walker.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
- Seitenzahl: 608
- Erscheinungstermin: 10. August 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 244mm x 189mm x 25mm
- Gewicht: 1156g
- ISBN-13: 9781350352414
- ISBN-10: 1350352411
- Artikelnr.: 67743684
- Verlag: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
- Seitenzahl: 608
- Erscheinungstermin: 10. August 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 244mm x 189mm x 25mm
- Gewicht: 1156g
- ISBN-13: 9781350352414
- ISBN-10: 1350352411
- Artikelnr.: 67743684
Hazel Clark is Professor of Design Studies and Fashion Studies and David Brody is Professor of Design Studies, both at Parsons School of Design, The New School, USA.
General Introduction
Hazel Clark and David Brody SECTION I: HISTORY OF DESIGN Section Introduction I.1: DESIGN HISTORIES Part Introduction 1. Nikolaus Pevsner
Pioneers of Modern Design 2. Adrian Forty
Design
Designers and the Literature of Design 3. Matthew Turner
Early Modern Design in Hong Kong 4. Lucila Fernández Uriate
Modernity and Postmodernity from Cuba I.2: DESIGN HISTORY AS A DISCIPLINE Part Introduction 5. Victor Margolin
Design History and Design Studies 6. John Walker
Defining the Object of Study 7. Judy Attfield
FORM/female FOLLOWS FUNCTION/male 8. Denise Whitehouse
The State of Design History as a Discipline Annotated Guide to Further Reading SECTION II: DESIGN THINKING Section Introduction II.1: DESIGN PHILOSOPHIES AND THEORIES Part Introduction 9. Buckminster Fuller
Speculative Prehistory of Humanity 10. John Chris Jones
What is Designing? 11. Louis Bucciarelli
Designing Engineers 12. Henry Petroski
Success and Failure in Design 13. Richard Buchanan
Wicked Problems in Design Thinking II.2: DESIGN RESEARCH Part Introduction 14. Herbert Simon
Understanding the Natural and Artificial Worlds 15. Donald Schön
Designing; Rules
Types and Worlds 16. Susan Squires
Discovery Research II: 3 DESIGN COMMUNICATIONS Part Introduction 17. Eric van Schaak
The Division of Pictorial Publicity in World War I 18. D.J Huppatz
Globalizing Corporate Identity in Hong Kong 19. Shirley Teresa Wajda
Kmartha Annotated Guide to Further Reading SECTION III: THEORIZING DESIGN AND VISUALITY Section Introduction III.1: AESTHETICS Part Introduction 20. Arthur C. Danto
Aesthetics and the Work of Art 21. Jean Baudrillard
Design and Environment 22. Reyner Banham
Taking it with You III.2: ETHICS Part Introduction 23. Zygmunt Bauman
In the Beginning was Design 24. Susan Szenasy
Ethical Design Education 25. AIGA/Rick Poyner
First Things First 2000 26. Clive Dilnot
Ethics in Design: 10 Questions III.3: POLITICS Part Introduction 27. Karl Marx
The Fetishism of Commodities and the Secret Thereof 28. Pierre Bourdieu
The Aesthetic Sense and the Sense of Distinction 29. Naomi Klein
No Logo 30. Dick Hebdige
Subculture and Style 31. John Stones
Incendiary Devices 32. Gui Bonsiepe
Design and Democracy III.4 MATERIAL CULTURE AND SOCIAL INTERACTIONS Part Introduction 33. Jules Prown
Mind in Matter 34. Daniel Miller
The Artefact as Manufactured Object 35. Michel Foucault
Panopticism 36. Michel de Certeau
Walking in the City 37. Erving Goffman
The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life Annotated Guide to Further Reading SECTION IV: IDENTITY AND CONSUMPTION Section Introduction IV.1: VIRTUAL IDENTITY AND DESIGN Part Introduction 38. Donna Haraway
A Cyborg Manifesto 39. Katie Salen and Eric Zimmerman
Introducing Cybernetic Systems 40. Justin Clark
Get a Life 41. Gavin O'Malley
American Apparel IV.2: GENDER AND DESIGN Part Introduction 42. Cheryl Buckley
Made in Patriarchy 43. Barbara Ehrenreich and Annette Fuentes
Life on the Global Assembly Line 44. Hazel Clark The Difference of Female Design IV.3: CONSUMPTION Part Introduction 45. Mary Douglas and Baron Isherwood
Technology and Consumption 46. Daniel Harris
Quaintness 47. Sarah Lichtman
Do-It-Yourself Security 48. W.F. Haug
Critique of Commodity Aesthetics 49. Heike Jenß
Fashioning Uniqueness: Mass-Customization and Commodization of Identity Annotated Guide to Further Reading SECTION V: LABOR
INDUSTRIALIZATION AND NEW TECHNOLOGY Section Introduction V.1: LABOR AND THE PRODUCTION OF DESIGN Part Introduction 50. John Styles
Manufacturing Consumption and Design 51. Paul du Gay
et al
The Sony Walkman 52. Stuart Walker
Integration of Scale V.2: INDUSTRIALIZATION AND POST INDUSTRIALIZATION Part Introduction 53. David Brett
Drawing and the Ideology of Industrialization 54. Margaret Crawford
The 'New' Company Town 55. Frederick Winslow Taylor
The Principles of Scientific Management 56. Abraham Moles
Design and Immateriality V.3: NEW DESIGN AND NEW TECHNOLOGIES Part Introduction 57. Bradley Quinn
Hussein Chalayan
Fashion and Technology 58. Donald Norman
What's Wrong with the PC? 59. Vicente Rafael
The Cell Phone and the Crowd 60. Theodor Adorno
Do Not Knock Annotated Guide to Further Reading SECTION VI: DESIGN AND GLOBAL ISSUES Section Introduction VI.1: GLOBALIZATION Part Introduction 61. Arjun Appadurai
Modernity at Large 62. Hugh Aldersey-Williams
Globalism
Nationalism
and Design 63. Guy Julier
Responses to Globalisation VI.2: EQUALITY AND SOCIAL JUSTICE Part Introduction 64. Kate Stohr
Self-Help and Sites-and Services Programs 65. John Hockenberry
The Re-Education of Michael Graves 66. Ezio Manzini
A Cosmopolitan Localism 67. Earl Tai
Design Justice VI.3: SUSTAINABILITY Part Introduction 68. William McDonough and Michael Braungart
A Question of Design 69. Victor Papanek
Designing for a Safe Future 70. Trish Lorenz
British Designers Accused of Creating Throw-Away Culture Annotated Guide to Further Reading SECTION VII: DESIGN THINGS Section Introduction 71. Wava Carpenter
The Eames Lounge: The Difference between a Design Icon and Mere Furniture 72. Dipti Bhagat
The Tube Map (The London Underground Map) 73. Susan Yelavich
Swatch 74. Catherine Walsh
Architecture and Cultural Identity: The Case of the Petronas Towers in Kuala Lumpur 75. R. Roger Remington
Helvetica: Love it or Leave it 76. Shirley Teresa Wajda
The Architect and the Teakettle 77. Greg Votolato
Bullets and Beyond (The Shinkanzen) 78. Alison Gill
Sneakers 79. Bess Williamson
The Bicycle: Considering Design in Use 80. Gerard Goggin
Cell Phone Annotated Guide to Further Reading Bibliography
Hazel Clark and David Brody SECTION I: HISTORY OF DESIGN Section Introduction I.1: DESIGN HISTORIES Part Introduction 1. Nikolaus Pevsner
Pioneers of Modern Design 2. Adrian Forty
Design
Designers and the Literature of Design 3. Matthew Turner
Early Modern Design in Hong Kong 4. Lucila Fernández Uriate
Modernity and Postmodernity from Cuba I.2: DESIGN HISTORY AS A DISCIPLINE Part Introduction 5. Victor Margolin
Design History and Design Studies 6. John Walker
Defining the Object of Study 7. Judy Attfield
FORM/female FOLLOWS FUNCTION/male 8. Denise Whitehouse
The State of Design History as a Discipline Annotated Guide to Further Reading SECTION II: DESIGN THINKING Section Introduction II.1: DESIGN PHILOSOPHIES AND THEORIES Part Introduction 9. Buckminster Fuller
Speculative Prehistory of Humanity 10. John Chris Jones
What is Designing? 11. Louis Bucciarelli
Designing Engineers 12. Henry Petroski
Success and Failure in Design 13. Richard Buchanan
Wicked Problems in Design Thinking II.2: DESIGN RESEARCH Part Introduction 14. Herbert Simon
Understanding the Natural and Artificial Worlds 15. Donald Schön
Designing; Rules
Types and Worlds 16. Susan Squires
Discovery Research II: 3 DESIGN COMMUNICATIONS Part Introduction 17. Eric van Schaak
The Division of Pictorial Publicity in World War I 18. D.J Huppatz
Globalizing Corporate Identity in Hong Kong 19. Shirley Teresa Wajda
Kmartha Annotated Guide to Further Reading SECTION III: THEORIZING DESIGN AND VISUALITY Section Introduction III.1: AESTHETICS Part Introduction 20. Arthur C. Danto
Aesthetics and the Work of Art 21. Jean Baudrillard
Design and Environment 22. Reyner Banham
Taking it with You III.2: ETHICS Part Introduction 23. Zygmunt Bauman
In the Beginning was Design 24. Susan Szenasy
Ethical Design Education 25. AIGA/Rick Poyner
First Things First 2000 26. Clive Dilnot
Ethics in Design: 10 Questions III.3: POLITICS Part Introduction 27. Karl Marx
The Fetishism of Commodities and the Secret Thereof 28. Pierre Bourdieu
The Aesthetic Sense and the Sense of Distinction 29. Naomi Klein
No Logo 30. Dick Hebdige
Subculture and Style 31. John Stones
Incendiary Devices 32. Gui Bonsiepe
Design and Democracy III.4 MATERIAL CULTURE AND SOCIAL INTERACTIONS Part Introduction 33. Jules Prown
Mind in Matter 34. Daniel Miller
The Artefact as Manufactured Object 35. Michel Foucault
Panopticism 36. Michel de Certeau
Walking in the City 37. Erving Goffman
The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life Annotated Guide to Further Reading SECTION IV: IDENTITY AND CONSUMPTION Section Introduction IV.1: VIRTUAL IDENTITY AND DESIGN Part Introduction 38. Donna Haraway
A Cyborg Manifesto 39. Katie Salen and Eric Zimmerman
Introducing Cybernetic Systems 40. Justin Clark
Get a Life 41. Gavin O'Malley
American Apparel IV.2: GENDER AND DESIGN Part Introduction 42. Cheryl Buckley
Made in Patriarchy 43. Barbara Ehrenreich and Annette Fuentes
Life on the Global Assembly Line 44. Hazel Clark The Difference of Female Design IV.3: CONSUMPTION Part Introduction 45. Mary Douglas and Baron Isherwood
Technology and Consumption 46. Daniel Harris
Quaintness 47. Sarah Lichtman
Do-It-Yourself Security 48. W.F. Haug
Critique of Commodity Aesthetics 49. Heike Jenß
Fashioning Uniqueness: Mass-Customization and Commodization of Identity Annotated Guide to Further Reading SECTION V: LABOR
INDUSTRIALIZATION AND NEW TECHNOLOGY Section Introduction V.1: LABOR AND THE PRODUCTION OF DESIGN Part Introduction 50. John Styles
Manufacturing Consumption and Design 51. Paul du Gay
et al
The Sony Walkman 52. Stuart Walker
Integration of Scale V.2: INDUSTRIALIZATION AND POST INDUSTRIALIZATION Part Introduction 53. David Brett
Drawing and the Ideology of Industrialization 54. Margaret Crawford
The 'New' Company Town 55. Frederick Winslow Taylor
The Principles of Scientific Management 56. Abraham Moles
Design and Immateriality V.3: NEW DESIGN AND NEW TECHNOLOGIES Part Introduction 57. Bradley Quinn
Hussein Chalayan
Fashion and Technology 58. Donald Norman
What's Wrong with the PC? 59. Vicente Rafael
The Cell Phone and the Crowd 60. Theodor Adorno
Do Not Knock Annotated Guide to Further Reading SECTION VI: DESIGN AND GLOBAL ISSUES Section Introduction VI.1: GLOBALIZATION Part Introduction 61. Arjun Appadurai
Modernity at Large 62. Hugh Aldersey-Williams
Globalism
Nationalism
and Design 63. Guy Julier
Responses to Globalisation VI.2: EQUALITY AND SOCIAL JUSTICE Part Introduction 64. Kate Stohr
Self-Help and Sites-and Services Programs 65. John Hockenberry
The Re-Education of Michael Graves 66. Ezio Manzini
A Cosmopolitan Localism 67. Earl Tai
Design Justice VI.3: SUSTAINABILITY Part Introduction 68. William McDonough and Michael Braungart
A Question of Design 69. Victor Papanek
Designing for a Safe Future 70. Trish Lorenz
British Designers Accused of Creating Throw-Away Culture Annotated Guide to Further Reading SECTION VII: DESIGN THINGS Section Introduction 71. Wava Carpenter
The Eames Lounge: The Difference between a Design Icon and Mere Furniture 72. Dipti Bhagat
The Tube Map (The London Underground Map) 73. Susan Yelavich
Swatch 74. Catherine Walsh
Architecture and Cultural Identity: The Case of the Petronas Towers in Kuala Lumpur 75. R. Roger Remington
Helvetica: Love it or Leave it 76. Shirley Teresa Wajda
The Architect and the Teakettle 77. Greg Votolato
Bullets and Beyond (The Shinkanzen) 78. Alison Gill
Sneakers 79. Bess Williamson
The Bicycle: Considering Design in Use 80. Gerard Goggin
Cell Phone Annotated Guide to Further Reading Bibliography
General Introduction
Hazel Clark and David Brody SECTION I: HISTORY OF DESIGN Section Introduction I.1: DESIGN HISTORIES Part Introduction 1. Nikolaus Pevsner
Pioneers of Modern Design 2. Adrian Forty
Design
Designers and the Literature of Design 3. Matthew Turner
Early Modern Design in Hong Kong 4. Lucila Fernández Uriate
Modernity and Postmodernity from Cuba I.2: DESIGN HISTORY AS A DISCIPLINE Part Introduction 5. Victor Margolin
Design History and Design Studies 6. John Walker
Defining the Object of Study 7. Judy Attfield
FORM/female FOLLOWS FUNCTION/male 8. Denise Whitehouse
The State of Design History as a Discipline Annotated Guide to Further Reading SECTION II: DESIGN THINKING Section Introduction II.1: DESIGN PHILOSOPHIES AND THEORIES Part Introduction 9. Buckminster Fuller
Speculative Prehistory of Humanity 10. John Chris Jones
What is Designing? 11. Louis Bucciarelli
Designing Engineers 12. Henry Petroski
Success and Failure in Design 13. Richard Buchanan
Wicked Problems in Design Thinking II.2: DESIGN RESEARCH Part Introduction 14. Herbert Simon
Understanding the Natural and Artificial Worlds 15. Donald Schön
Designing; Rules
Types and Worlds 16. Susan Squires
Discovery Research II: 3 DESIGN COMMUNICATIONS Part Introduction 17. Eric van Schaak
The Division of Pictorial Publicity in World War I 18. D.J Huppatz
Globalizing Corporate Identity in Hong Kong 19. Shirley Teresa Wajda
Kmartha Annotated Guide to Further Reading SECTION III: THEORIZING DESIGN AND VISUALITY Section Introduction III.1: AESTHETICS Part Introduction 20. Arthur C. Danto
Aesthetics and the Work of Art 21. Jean Baudrillard
Design and Environment 22. Reyner Banham
Taking it with You III.2: ETHICS Part Introduction 23. Zygmunt Bauman
In the Beginning was Design 24. Susan Szenasy
Ethical Design Education 25. AIGA/Rick Poyner
First Things First 2000 26. Clive Dilnot
Ethics in Design: 10 Questions III.3: POLITICS Part Introduction 27. Karl Marx
The Fetishism of Commodities and the Secret Thereof 28. Pierre Bourdieu
The Aesthetic Sense and the Sense of Distinction 29. Naomi Klein
No Logo 30. Dick Hebdige
Subculture and Style 31. John Stones
Incendiary Devices 32. Gui Bonsiepe
Design and Democracy III.4 MATERIAL CULTURE AND SOCIAL INTERACTIONS Part Introduction 33. Jules Prown
Mind in Matter 34. Daniel Miller
The Artefact as Manufactured Object 35. Michel Foucault
Panopticism 36. Michel de Certeau
Walking in the City 37. Erving Goffman
The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life Annotated Guide to Further Reading SECTION IV: IDENTITY AND CONSUMPTION Section Introduction IV.1: VIRTUAL IDENTITY AND DESIGN Part Introduction 38. Donna Haraway
A Cyborg Manifesto 39. Katie Salen and Eric Zimmerman
Introducing Cybernetic Systems 40. Justin Clark
Get a Life 41. Gavin O'Malley
American Apparel IV.2: GENDER AND DESIGN Part Introduction 42. Cheryl Buckley
Made in Patriarchy 43. Barbara Ehrenreich and Annette Fuentes
Life on the Global Assembly Line 44. Hazel Clark The Difference of Female Design IV.3: CONSUMPTION Part Introduction 45. Mary Douglas and Baron Isherwood
Technology and Consumption 46. Daniel Harris
Quaintness 47. Sarah Lichtman
Do-It-Yourself Security 48. W.F. Haug
Critique of Commodity Aesthetics 49. Heike Jenß
Fashioning Uniqueness: Mass-Customization and Commodization of Identity Annotated Guide to Further Reading SECTION V: LABOR
INDUSTRIALIZATION AND NEW TECHNOLOGY Section Introduction V.1: LABOR AND THE PRODUCTION OF DESIGN Part Introduction 50. John Styles
Manufacturing Consumption and Design 51. Paul du Gay
et al
The Sony Walkman 52. Stuart Walker
Integration of Scale V.2: INDUSTRIALIZATION AND POST INDUSTRIALIZATION Part Introduction 53. David Brett
Drawing and the Ideology of Industrialization 54. Margaret Crawford
The 'New' Company Town 55. Frederick Winslow Taylor
The Principles of Scientific Management 56. Abraham Moles
Design and Immateriality V.3: NEW DESIGN AND NEW TECHNOLOGIES Part Introduction 57. Bradley Quinn
Hussein Chalayan
Fashion and Technology 58. Donald Norman
What's Wrong with the PC? 59. Vicente Rafael
The Cell Phone and the Crowd 60. Theodor Adorno
Do Not Knock Annotated Guide to Further Reading SECTION VI: DESIGN AND GLOBAL ISSUES Section Introduction VI.1: GLOBALIZATION Part Introduction 61. Arjun Appadurai
Modernity at Large 62. Hugh Aldersey-Williams
Globalism
Nationalism
and Design 63. Guy Julier
Responses to Globalisation VI.2: EQUALITY AND SOCIAL JUSTICE Part Introduction 64. Kate Stohr
Self-Help and Sites-and Services Programs 65. John Hockenberry
The Re-Education of Michael Graves 66. Ezio Manzini
A Cosmopolitan Localism 67. Earl Tai
Design Justice VI.3: SUSTAINABILITY Part Introduction 68. William McDonough and Michael Braungart
A Question of Design 69. Victor Papanek
Designing for a Safe Future 70. Trish Lorenz
British Designers Accused of Creating Throw-Away Culture Annotated Guide to Further Reading SECTION VII: DESIGN THINGS Section Introduction 71. Wava Carpenter
The Eames Lounge: The Difference between a Design Icon and Mere Furniture 72. Dipti Bhagat
The Tube Map (The London Underground Map) 73. Susan Yelavich
Swatch 74. Catherine Walsh
Architecture and Cultural Identity: The Case of the Petronas Towers in Kuala Lumpur 75. R. Roger Remington
Helvetica: Love it or Leave it 76. Shirley Teresa Wajda
The Architect and the Teakettle 77. Greg Votolato
Bullets and Beyond (The Shinkanzen) 78. Alison Gill
Sneakers 79. Bess Williamson
The Bicycle: Considering Design in Use 80. Gerard Goggin
Cell Phone Annotated Guide to Further Reading Bibliography
Hazel Clark and David Brody SECTION I: HISTORY OF DESIGN Section Introduction I.1: DESIGN HISTORIES Part Introduction 1. Nikolaus Pevsner
Pioneers of Modern Design 2. Adrian Forty
Design
Designers and the Literature of Design 3. Matthew Turner
Early Modern Design in Hong Kong 4. Lucila Fernández Uriate
Modernity and Postmodernity from Cuba I.2: DESIGN HISTORY AS A DISCIPLINE Part Introduction 5. Victor Margolin
Design History and Design Studies 6. John Walker
Defining the Object of Study 7. Judy Attfield
FORM/female FOLLOWS FUNCTION/male 8. Denise Whitehouse
The State of Design History as a Discipline Annotated Guide to Further Reading SECTION II: DESIGN THINKING Section Introduction II.1: DESIGN PHILOSOPHIES AND THEORIES Part Introduction 9. Buckminster Fuller
Speculative Prehistory of Humanity 10. John Chris Jones
What is Designing? 11. Louis Bucciarelli
Designing Engineers 12. Henry Petroski
Success and Failure in Design 13. Richard Buchanan
Wicked Problems in Design Thinking II.2: DESIGN RESEARCH Part Introduction 14. Herbert Simon
Understanding the Natural and Artificial Worlds 15. Donald Schön
Designing; Rules
Types and Worlds 16. Susan Squires
Discovery Research II: 3 DESIGN COMMUNICATIONS Part Introduction 17. Eric van Schaak
The Division of Pictorial Publicity in World War I 18. D.J Huppatz
Globalizing Corporate Identity in Hong Kong 19. Shirley Teresa Wajda
Kmartha Annotated Guide to Further Reading SECTION III: THEORIZING DESIGN AND VISUALITY Section Introduction III.1: AESTHETICS Part Introduction 20. Arthur C. Danto
Aesthetics and the Work of Art 21. Jean Baudrillard
Design and Environment 22. Reyner Banham
Taking it with You III.2: ETHICS Part Introduction 23. Zygmunt Bauman
In the Beginning was Design 24. Susan Szenasy
Ethical Design Education 25. AIGA/Rick Poyner
First Things First 2000 26. Clive Dilnot
Ethics in Design: 10 Questions III.3: POLITICS Part Introduction 27. Karl Marx
The Fetishism of Commodities and the Secret Thereof 28. Pierre Bourdieu
The Aesthetic Sense and the Sense of Distinction 29. Naomi Klein
No Logo 30. Dick Hebdige
Subculture and Style 31. John Stones
Incendiary Devices 32. Gui Bonsiepe
Design and Democracy III.4 MATERIAL CULTURE AND SOCIAL INTERACTIONS Part Introduction 33. Jules Prown
Mind in Matter 34. Daniel Miller
The Artefact as Manufactured Object 35. Michel Foucault
Panopticism 36. Michel de Certeau
Walking in the City 37. Erving Goffman
The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life Annotated Guide to Further Reading SECTION IV: IDENTITY AND CONSUMPTION Section Introduction IV.1: VIRTUAL IDENTITY AND DESIGN Part Introduction 38. Donna Haraway
A Cyborg Manifesto 39. Katie Salen and Eric Zimmerman
Introducing Cybernetic Systems 40. Justin Clark
Get a Life 41. Gavin O'Malley
American Apparel IV.2: GENDER AND DESIGN Part Introduction 42. Cheryl Buckley
Made in Patriarchy 43. Barbara Ehrenreich and Annette Fuentes
Life on the Global Assembly Line 44. Hazel Clark The Difference of Female Design IV.3: CONSUMPTION Part Introduction 45. Mary Douglas and Baron Isherwood
Technology and Consumption 46. Daniel Harris
Quaintness 47. Sarah Lichtman
Do-It-Yourself Security 48. W.F. Haug
Critique of Commodity Aesthetics 49. Heike Jenß
Fashioning Uniqueness: Mass-Customization and Commodization of Identity Annotated Guide to Further Reading SECTION V: LABOR
INDUSTRIALIZATION AND NEW TECHNOLOGY Section Introduction V.1: LABOR AND THE PRODUCTION OF DESIGN Part Introduction 50. John Styles
Manufacturing Consumption and Design 51. Paul du Gay
et al
The Sony Walkman 52. Stuart Walker
Integration of Scale V.2: INDUSTRIALIZATION AND POST INDUSTRIALIZATION Part Introduction 53. David Brett
Drawing and the Ideology of Industrialization 54. Margaret Crawford
The 'New' Company Town 55. Frederick Winslow Taylor
The Principles of Scientific Management 56. Abraham Moles
Design and Immateriality V.3: NEW DESIGN AND NEW TECHNOLOGIES Part Introduction 57. Bradley Quinn
Hussein Chalayan
Fashion and Technology 58. Donald Norman
What's Wrong with the PC? 59. Vicente Rafael
The Cell Phone and the Crowd 60. Theodor Adorno
Do Not Knock Annotated Guide to Further Reading SECTION VI: DESIGN AND GLOBAL ISSUES Section Introduction VI.1: GLOBALIZATION Part Introduction 61. Arjun Appadurai
Modernity at Large 62. Hugh Aldersey-Williams
Globalism
Nationalism
and Design 63. Guy Julier
Responses to Globalisation VI.2: EQUALITY AND SOCIAL JUSTICE Part Introduction 64. Kate Stohr
Self-Help and Sites-and Services Programs 65. John Hockenberry
The Re-Education of Michael Graves 66. Ezio Manzini
A Cosmopolitan Localism 67. Earl Tai
Design Justice VI.3: SUSTAINABILITY Part Introduction 68. William McDonough and Michael Braungart
A Question of Design 69. Victor Papanek
Designing for a Safe Future 70. Trish Lorenz
British Designers Accused of Creating Throw-Away Culture Annotated Guide to Further Reading SECTION VII: DESIGN THINGS Section Introduction 71. Wava Carpenter
The Eames Lounge: The Difference between a Design Icon and Mere Furniture 72. Dipti Bhagat
The Tube Map (The London Underground Map) 73. Susan Yelavich
Swatch 74. Catherine Walsh
Architecture and Cultural Identity: The Case of the Petronas Towers in Kuala Lumpur 75. R. Roger Remington
Helvetica: Love it or Leave it 76. Shirley Teresa Wajda
The Architect and the Teakettle 77. Greg Votolato
Bullets and Beyond (The Shinkanzen) 78. Alison Gill
Sneakers 79. Bess Williamson
The Bicycle: Considering Design in Use 80. Gerard Goggin
Cell Phone Annotated Guide to Further Reading Bibliography