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Incorporating Architects

How American Architecture Became a Practice of Empire

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"A pathbreaking study that sheds light on an oddly little-studied aspect of architectural practice, despite its ubiquity and indispensability: the large architectural corporation. Cayer's account of the early AECOM and its expanded idea of architecture as a suite of related and unrelated services is business study, cultural critique, and aesthetic reflection rolled into one. A must-read for those looking or willing to go behind the 'creative' façade of the architectural profession."--Arindam Dutta, Professor of Architectural Theory and History, MIT

"Far from the standard monographic, navel-gazing study of a single genius architect, Incorporating Architects uses the history of an architecture and engineering corporation to challenge our received wisdom about the nature of architectural practice. Aaron Cayer's analysis dissects one firm so thoroughly and insightfully that we learn something entirely new about the interconnections and dependencies among operations of the state, national and global economies, and capitalism itself."--Sara Stevens, author of Developing Expertise: Architecture and Real Estate in Metropolitan America

"In this compelling exposé, Cayer charts the rise of AECOM, revealing how a once-traditional architecture firm adapted to become an essential player in the American empire's postwar expansion. Incorporating Architects is both a cautionary tale and a necessary rethinking of the architecture profession. It signals a new road that opens for many other professional fields."--Magali Sarfatti Larson, Professor Emerita of Sociology, Temple University, University of Urbino

Informations bibliographiques

juin 2025, env. 364 Pages, Anglais
University Presses
978-0-520-40087-0

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