ISBN:
9781940743493
,
1940743494
Language:
English
Pages:
255 pages
,
illustrations (chiefly color), maps (chiefly color)
Edition:
First edition
Series Statement:
Our voices / by Rebecca Kiddle, luugigyoo patrick stewart, and Kevin O'Brien [1]
Series Statement:
Kiddle, Rebecca Our voices.
DDC:
724.6
Keywords:
Architecture and anthropology
;
Architecture Themes, motives
;
Indigenous peoples
;
Architecture and race
;
Architecture and society
;
Ethnic architecture
;
Architecture and anthropology
;
Architecture ; Themes, motives
;
Indigenous peoples
;
Architecture and race
;
Architecture and society
;
Ethnic architecture
;
Architecture and anthropology
;
Architecture and race
;
Architecture and society
;
Architecture ; Themes, motives
;
Ethnic architecture
;
Indigenous peoples
;
Hoahoanga whare
;
Mātauranga tikanga tāngata
;
Iwi taketake
;
Architecture and Planning
;
Architektur
;
Indigenes Volk
Abstract:
Tribute to Rewi Thompson /Deidre Brown, Nicholas Dalton and Te Aritaua Prendergast --Voice /Haare Williams --Foreword /Haare Williams --The ethics of writing and producing a book on indigeneity and architecture /Rebecca Kiddle, Iuugigyoo Patrick Stewart and Kevin O'Brien --Te wāhanga tuatahi (Section 1): He kaupapa taketake: our voice through architecture. Kumara : more than a vegetable /Haare Williams --Architecture and consent /Kevin O'Brien --Architecture as an indigenous voice soul and spirit /Iuugigyoo Patrick Stewart --Te wāhanga tuarua (Section 2): They've always been indigenous places. Contemporary Māori placemaking /Rebecca Kiddle --The effect of Redfern's indigenous community on local and neighbouring planning /Michael Hromek --My Māori spaces: women's spaces /Amiria Perez --Métis domestic thresholds and the politics of imposed privacy /David Fortin Jason Surkan and Danielle Kastelein --Ka tahuri i te riu, kia tika: indigenous participation in earthquake recovery planning /Hauauru Rae and Michelle Thompson-Fawcett --Cultural identity and architecture /Douglas Cardinal --Does Blak design matter? /Timmah Ball --Te Wāhanga tuatoru (Section 3): rebuilding the processes of indigenous placemaking and placekeeping. Conserving Māori architecture, maintaining traditional Māori arts /Ellen Andersen --Finding our voice in our indigenous homeland /Daniel Glenn --Māori self-determination using dreaming and visualising techniques to build sustainable communities /Fleur Palmer --Everything is a circle /Michael Laverdure --Indigenous Placekeeping Framework (IPKF): an interdisciplinary architectural studio as Praxis /Wanda Dalla Costa --Embracing cultural sensitivities that celebrate first nations perspectives /Jefa Greenaway
Abstract:
Contemporary papakāinga design: principles and applications /Jade Kake --Closing the non-indigenous gap /Sarah Lynn Rees --Designing to express community values: a new community school in South Dakota /Tammy Eagle Bull --Te Wāhanga tuawha (Section 4): Reclaiming architectural sovereignty. Decolonising the whenua /Matthew Gordon --Facing the irony /Linda Kennedy --Thrid space in architecture /Michael Mossman --Weypiskosiweywin: the people have been displaced /K. Jake Chakasim --Always is: aboriginal spatial experiences of land and country /Danièle Hromek --'Kohanga rehua' --restoring the last earth floor Māori meeting house in Aotearoa, New Zealand /Rau Hoskins --He whakakapi /Rebecca Kiddle, Kevin O'Brien and Iuugigyoo Patrick Stewart.
Abstract:
This book is an exciting advance in the field of architecture, offering multiple indigenous perspectives on architecture and design theory and practice. Indigenous authors from Aotearoa NZ, Canada, Australia and the USA explore the making and keeping of places and spaces which are informed by indigenous values and identities. The lack of publications to date offering an indigenous lens on the field of architecture belies the rich expertise found in indigenous communities in all four countries. This expertise is made richer by the fact that this indigenous expertise combines both architecture and design professional practice, that for the most part is informed by Western thought and practice, with a frame of reference that roots this architecture in the indigenous places in which it sits
Note:
Includes bibliographical references
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