Architecture and Its Interpretation: A Study of Expressive Systems in ArchitectureRizzoli, 1979 - 271 Seiten |
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Seite 90
... responses to background music ; they take even less than a minute to arise . Whether or not we call them interpretations , these reac- tions are important for they constitute the very bulk of people's trans- action with architecture ...
... responses to background music ; they take even less than a minute to arise . Whether or not we call them interpretations , these reac- tions are important for they constitute the very bulk of people's trans- action with architecture ...
Seite 139
... responses . The meaning ascribed to form in a pre - canonical response and a canonical interpretation can be the same . Differences are to be found not in content but in the ways in which interpretations operate within society . Pre ...
... responses . The meaning ascribed to form in a pre - canonical response and a canonical interpretation can be the same . Differences are to be found not in content but in the ways in which interpretations operate within society . Pre ...
Seite 183
... responses , then the canonical in- terpretation and its dissemination , and finally silence and oblivion . But the cycle may not be fully completed in all cases ; it can be interrupted at any step . Very often the process does not go ...
... responses , then the canonical in- terpretation and its dissemination , and finally silence and oblivion . But the cycle may not be fully completed in all cases ; it can be interrupted at any step . Very often the process does not go ...
Inhalt
Foreword by Geoffrey Broadbent | 7 |
Semiotic analysis | 26 |
The contemporary scene | 49 |
Urheberrecht | |
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