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A HISTORY OF AMERICAN ARCHITECTURE: Buildings in their Cultural and Technological Context.


By Mark Gelernter. Manchester: Manchester University Press. 1999. [pounds]50

This richly illustrated and broad survey including discussions of native, vernacular ver·nac·u·lar  
n.
1. The standard native language of a country or locality.

2.
a. The everyday language spoken by a people as distinguished from the literary language. See Synonyms at dialect.

b.
, traditional and elite styles, traces American architecture American architecture, the architecture produced in the geographical area that now constitutes the United States. Early History


American architecture properly begins in the 17th cent. with the colonization of the North American continent.
 from 12,000 BC to 1998. Gelernter discusses what he considers the dominant social, political, and philosophical forces of the day, as well as parallel developments in Europe. European European

emanating from or pertaining to Europe.


European bat lyssavirus
see lyssavirus.

European beech tree
fagussylvaticus.

European blastomycosis
see cryptococcosis.
 influences on American architectural thinking and design are examined, as well as the unique ways in which American architects have borrowed, adapted and transformed European forms.

The most compelling parts of the book are Gelernter's continuing reminder that no age was dominated by just one style of architecture and his discussion of important and influential styles that Modernist histories of architecture either dismiss or ignore. In America, he tells us, not only were there competing styles, but vernacular, public and elite architecture often varied regionally -- by English, French and Spanish and at times, native architectural traditions.

What makes the book so bold and broad in its sweep also makes it, at times, overly simplistic sim·plism  
n.
The tendency to oversimplify an issue or a problem by ignoring complexities or complications.



[French simplisme, from simple, simple, from Old French; see simple
 -- a problem with many introductory texts, For one example, while Gelernter recognizes that no one architectural style corresponds to a particular social or political system, he never introduces a style that does not have an easy and unmediated Adj. 1. unmediated - having no intervening persons, agents, conditions; "in direct sunlight"; "in direct contact with the voters"; "direct exposure to the disease"; "a direct link"; "the direct cause of the accident"; "direct vote"
direct
 correlation to a relatively simplistic description of some political or social form or idea. Nonetheless, as an overview for the layperson lay·per·son  
n.
A layman or a laywoman.

Noun 1. layperson - someone who is not a clergyman or a professional person
layman, secular
 or starting student, this would not be a bad place to begin.
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Title Annotation:Review
Author:ROBBINS, ED
Publication:The Architectural Review
Article Type:Book Review
Date:Dec 1, 1999
Words:242
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