Architecture and Affect: Precarious Spaces

Author:   Lilian Chee
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9781032407548


Pages:   366
Publication Date:   28 November 2024
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Architecture and Affect: Precarious Spaces


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Author:   Lilian Chee
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Weight:   0.720kg
ISBN:  

9781032407548


ISBN 10:   1032407549
Pages:   366
Publication Date:   28 November 2024
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Reviews

‘Chee takes us on an encounter-as-detour, tracking spatial stories imbued with affect and haunted by precarious power relations. Undoing the discipline’s instrumental ambitions and revealing the fallacy of its purported autonomy, she asks: If we become better attuned to the micro-politics of radically open-ended affective encounters, can our knowledge practices in architecture be transformed?’ ––––– Hélène Frichot, Professor of Architecture and Philosophy, University of Melbourne 'Lilian Chee’s Architecture and Affect is an exceptionally important contribution to the architectural field. It asks a simple but most profound question: how can we account for affective responses to architecture, so often dismissed as incidental yet so vital to lived experience? Chee draws on a series of encounters with spaces in Singapore in order to build a frame through which to incorporate affect into architectural histories, theories, and practices. These encounters immerse readers in residual spaces where scholars still-too-rarely go, from mass housing to cemeteries, and dwell on everyday practices of inhabitation and care, from feeding stray cats to exhuming tombs. A noted filmmaker, architectural designer and feminist theorist, Chee’s original and rooted portrait of architectural affect reflects years of intimate engagement with her sites across many registers. The result is itself a beautiful ‘monument’ – to squinting from blindspots, being captivated by subjects, and never ignoring the tiger under the billiard table.' ––––– Barbara Penner, Professor in Architectural Humanities, Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL 'With delight and wit, Lilian Chee opens the door of architecture to anecdotes, stories, film, and photography of lives within, on, and around the structures that architects install. She takes on the ideology of social democratic mass housing and its implications for muted subjectivities enmeshed in the discipline of mortgages and home ownership, while at the same time stirring up spectralities of pasts and futures that are ambiguous and compelling. With this book, Chee re-opens a new chapter in Singaporean critical theory.' ––––– Michael M.J. Fischer, Andrew W. Mellon Professor in the Humanities, Professor of Anthropology and Science and Technology Studies, MIT 'A dialectical ingenuity, Chee's Architecture and Affect provocatively recasts the role of architectural history and theory as being three things at once: intellectual, affectively lived, and speculative. Giving alternative and intimate insights into Singapore’s spatial politics, this beautifully illustrated and eccentric fly-on-the-wall work is a critical and imaginative profundity of lasting memory.’ ––––– CJ Lim, Professor of Architecture and Urbanism, The Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL


Author Information

Lilian Chee is Associate Professor of Architectural Theory and Design at the National University of Singapore, where she co-leads the Research by Design Cluster. Her research revolves around architectural representation, affect theory, feminist politics, and creative practice methods. Her works include the award-winning essay film 03-FLATS (2014), the documentary Objects for Thriving (2022), and a co-edited book Remote Practices (2022). She leads a Social Sciences Research Council funded project about home-based labour. She writes on affect, architectural representation and domesticity.

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