Daniel
M. Abramson
Panelist: "Where
from Here?" Roundtable
Comments
(download pdf)
Daniel Abramson received his Ph.D. from Harvard
(Fine Arts) and now teaches at Tufts University where he is Associate
Professor of Art History and director of Architectural Studies. With a
scholarly interest in the relationship between architecture and capitalism,
he is the author of Skyscraper Rivals: The AIG Building and the Architecture
of Wall Street (Princeton Architectural Press, 2001) and Building
the Bank of England: Money, Architecture, Society, 1694-1942 (Yale
University Press, forthcoming 2005). He is a Fellow in the Warren Center’s
Built Environment Workshop this year, working on his current project which
explores the theme of obsolescence in modern architecture.
Eric
Avila
Respondent: “Reconsidering
Race in the Built Environment”
Comments
(download pdf)
Eric Avila received his Ph.D. from the University
of California at Berkeley and is currently Associate Professor of History
and Chicano Studies at the University of California at Los Angeles. He
is author of Popular Culture in the Age of White Flight: Fear and Fantasy
in Suburban Los Angeles, published by the University of California
Press in August of 2004. He is a Fellow in the Warren Center’s Built
Environment Workshop this year, commencing work on Beneath the Shadows
of the Freeway: Highway Construction and the Making of Race in the Modernist
City.
Robin Bachin
Panelist: "Where
from Here?" Roundtable
Comments
(download pdf)
Robin F. Bachin is the Charlton W. Tebeau Associate
Professor of History at the University of Miami. She received her Ph.D.
from the University of Michigan in 1996. Her areas of research and teaching
include American urban, environmental, immigration, and cultural history.
Her first book, Building the South Side: Urban Space and Civic Culture
in Chicago, 1890-1919, was published in 2004 by The University of
Chicago
Press. Her current book project, Home Away from Home: The Transformation
of Seaside Recreation on the East Coast, 1865-2000, focuses on the
rapid commercialization of seaside resorts in the late-nineteenth and
twentieth centuries.
Homi
Bhabha
Panelist: "Where
from Here?" Roundtable
(comments not currently available)
Homi Bhabha received the D.Phil from Christ Church, Oxford, and is the
Anne F. Rothenberg Professor of English and American Literature at Harvard
University. He is the author of The Location of Culture (Routledge,
1994, new edition, Routledge Classics 2004) and editor of the collection
Nation and Narration (Routledge, 1990). Currently a Fellow at the
Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, Bhabha is finishing a new book
entitled A Global Measure, which explores the cultural, ethical,
and aesthetic claims that accompany the desire for global progress in
an intercultural context.
Eve
Blau
Respondent: “Going
Public with the Built Environment”
Comments
(download pdf)
Eve Blau received her Ph.D. in architectural history
from Yale and currently teaches at the Harvard University Graduate School
of Design. Her book, The Architecture of Red Vienna, 1919-1934 (1999),
examines the complex interrelation of political program, architectural
practice, and urban history in large scale urban intervention, and the
process by which architecture and urban design can themselves become agents
of social change and collective discourse. Her current research focuses
on the city in Central Europe and examines the Socialist cultural legacy
in terms of the city and urban architecture.
Daniel Bluestone
Presenter:“Going
Public with the Built Environment”
“From
Bungalows to Blasted Landscapes:
Preservation’s Politics of Place”
Daniel Bluestone received his Ph.D. from the University
of Chicago and teaches in the University of Virginia's School of Architecture,
where he is the director of the Preservation Program. He is the author
of the prize-winning Constructing Chicago, and a specialist in
19th-century American architecture and urbanism, and the history and politics
of historic preservation in the United States. He has worked extensively
on local preservation and community history projects.
Zeynep Celik
Respondent:“Thinking
Comparatively
about the American Built Environment”
(comments not currently available)
Zeynep Celik (Ph.D. University of California, Berkeley,
1984) is a professor at the School of Architecture, New Jersey Institute
of Technology. She is the author of The Remaking of Istanbul (1986),
Displaying the Orient (1992), and Urban Forms and Colonial Confrontations
(1997), and coeditor of Streets: Critical Perspectives on Urban Space
(1993), as well as numerous articles on cross-cultural topics. She served
as the editor of the Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians
(2000-2003) and is currently working on a book titled Public Space,
Modernity, and Empire Building. This project is supported by fellowships
from ACLS and the Guggenheim Foundation.
Lizabeth Cohen
Co-chair: “The
History of the History of the Built Environment”
Conference Introduction
(download pdf)
Lizabeth Cohen received her PhD. from the University
of California at Berkeley, and currently teaches in Harvard University’s
History Department. She is the author of the prize-winning Making a
New Deal: Industrial Workers in Chicago, 1919-1939, and most recently,
A Consumers' Republic: The Politics of Mass Consumption in Postwar
America, a study of the political consequences of a mass consumption-oriented
economy and culture in post-World War II America. She has begun a book
project on the culture and politics of the built environment.
Margaret Crawford
Co-chair: “The
History of the History of the Built Environment”
Margaret Crawford received her Ph.D. in urban planning
from U.C.L.A. and is currently a professor at Harvard’s Graduate
School of Design. She has also taught at Southern California Institute
for Architecture, the University of Southern California, the Universities
of California at San Diego and Santa Barbara, and the University of Florence.
Her research focuses on the evolution, uses and meanings of urban space.
She is the author of Building the Workingman's Paradise: The Design
of American Company Towns and editor of The Car and the City: The
Automobile, the Built Environment and Daily Urban Life and Everyday
Urbanism.
Jeffry Diefendorf
Presenter: “Thinking
Comparatively about the American Built Environment”
“I Love That City, But
Which City?: Urban Change and Urban Identity in Basel, Boston, and Cologne”
Jeffry Diefendorf received his Ph.D. from the University of California
at Berkeley and has taught at the University of New Hampshire since 1976.
Among his major works are In the Wake of War: The Reconstruction of
German Cities after World War II and Rebuilding Urban Japan
(co-editor). He is currently working on a study of culture, planning,
and urban change in Cologne, Basel, and Boston.
Robert Fishman
Presenter: “The
History of the History of the Built Environment”
“Site Reading: How Urban
History Learned to See”
Robert Fishman received his Ph.D. in History from
Harvard, and teaches in the urban design, architecture, and urban planning
programs at the Taubman College of the University of Michigan. His major
works include Bourgeois Utopias: The Rise and Fall of Suburbia
(1987) and Urban Utopias in the Twentieth Century: Ebenezer Howard,
Frank Lloyd Wright, and Le Corbusier (1977). His most recent work
is on urban decentralization.
Alice Friedman
Chair: “Thinking
Comparatively About the American Built Environment”
Alice Friedman received her Ph.D. from Harvard
(Fine Arts) and is Professor of art, Chair of the Art Department and Co-director,
Architecture Program, Wellesley College. She is the author of House
and Household in Elizabethan England: Wollaton Hall and the Willoughby
Family (1989) and Women and the Making of the Modern House: A Social
and Architectural History (1998). She is a Fellow in the Warren Center’s
Built Environment Workshop this year, and is working on a book entitled
American Glamour and the Evolution of Modern Architecture.
Paul Groth
Panelist: "Where
from Here?" Roundtable
Comments
(download pdf)
Paul Groth is Professor of U.S. Cultural Landscape
HIstory and a member of the geography, architecture, and American studies
departments at the University of California, Berkeley. He has a professional
architecture degree (NDSU, 1972) and a Ph.D. in historical geography (UC
Berkeley, 1983). He is the author of Living Downtown: The History of
Residential Hotels in the United States (1994), and co-editor, with
Chris Wilson, of Everyday America: Cultural Landscape Studies after
J. B. Jackson. He is currently studying the interrelationships of
work, home, and leisure spaces in blue-collar West Oakland, California.
Dianne Harris
Presenter: “Reconsidering
Race in the Built Environment”
“Little White Houses: Critical
Race Theory and the Interpretation of Ordinary Dwellings in the United
States, 1945-60”
Dianne Harris received her Ph.D. from the University
of California at Berkeley and is currently Associate Professor at the
University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. An interdisciplinary scholar
whose areas of expertise include both the Italian Peninsula and the United
States, her current research interests include the social and spatial
constructions of race and class in the postwar United States. She is the
author of several books, including The Nature of Authority: Villa Culture,
Landscape, and Representation in Eighteenth-Century Lombardy and editor
of two books, including Sites Unseen: Essays in Landscape and Vision
(forthcoming). Harris's current project examines the ways ordinary postwar
U.S. houses and gardens served as frameworks for assimilation and the
reinforcement of racial identities and class assignment.
Dolores Hayden
Presenter:“Going
Public with the Built Environment”
“Contested Landscapes”
Dolores Hayden, Professor of Architecture, Urbanism,
and American Studies at Yale University, writes about the history of the
built environment and the polticis of design. Her most recent books are
A Field Guide to Sprawl (2004) and Building Suburbia: Green
Fields and Urban Growth, 1820-2000 (2003). The Power of Place:
Urban Landscapes as Public History (1995) explores multiethnic Los
Angeles. The Grand Domestic Revolution (1981) and Redesigning
the American Dream (1984) investigate women's history and housing.
Severn American Utopias (1976) analyzes communitarian towns. Hayden
studied art, literature, and architecture at Cambridge and Harvard. American
Yard (2004) is a collection of her poetry.
Greg Hise
Panelist: "Where
from Here?" Roundtable
Comments
(download pdf)
Greg Hise received his Ph.D. from the University
of California at Berkeley and is currently associate professor of urban
history at the University of Southern California. His books include Eden
by Design: The 1930 Olmsted-Bartholomew Plan for the Los Angeles Region
and Magnetic Los Angeles: Planning the Twentieth-Century Metropolis.
His current research projects include a history of Los Angeles from 1850
to 1930 and a glossary of urban keywords.
Jane Kamensky
Chair:
"Where from Here?" Roundtable
Jane Kamensky earned her Ph.D. from Yale, and is
the author of Governing the Tongue: The Politics of Speech in Early
New England (Oxford, 1997), and The Colonial Mosaic: American Women,
1600-1760 (Oxford, 1995). She is completing a book called The Exchange
Artist: A Story of Paper, Bricks, and Ash in Early National America,
a history of the Boston Exchange Coffee House (ca. 1809-1818) and its
founder, that will be published by Viking/ Penguin. Kamensky teaches at
Brandeis University, and is a Fellow in the Warren Center's Built Environment
Workshop this year.
Mary Lum
Chair: “Going
Public with the Built Environment”
Currently a Fellow at the Radcliffe Institute for
Advanced Study, Mary Lum is a Professor of Painting and Integrated Electronic
Arts at Alfred University and will begin teaching at Bennington College
in 2005-2006. She is an interdisciplinary artist whose practice includes
drawing, installation, still and moving images, and artist’s books.
Her recent work examines the subtle conditions that are shaped through
relationships between fact and fiction and between memory and history.
At Radcliffe, Lum is working on Tracing the City, a drawing project
that encompasses the experience of living in, wandering through, reading
about, recording, and remembering the city.
Paula Lupkin
Respondent: “Going
Public with the Built Environment”
Comments
(download pdf)
Paula Lupkin received her Ph.D. from the University
of Pennsylvania, and is currently assistant professor in the School of
Architecture at Washington University in St. Louis, teaching modern and
American architecture and urban history to students in the departments
of architecture, art history, history, and American cultural studies.
As a current Fellow at the Charles Warren Center she is completing Manhood
Factories: YMCA Architecture and the Masking of Modern Urban Culture,
a book on the massive building program of the Young Men's Christian Association
to be published by the University of Minnesota Press in their new American
Culture, Architecture, and Landscape series in 2006. Other research and
publication activities include the development of a new world architectural
history curriculum and pedagogical tools including an edited volume on
the history of cross-cultural exchange in the built environment, Encounters
in World Architecture.
Martha McNamara
Panelist: "Where
from Here?" Roundtable
Comments
(download pdf)
Martha McNamara is Associate Professor of History
at the University of Maine where she specializes in the study of vernacular
architecture, landscape history, material culture, and the history of
New England. She received her Ph.D. in American and New England Studies
from Boston University in 1995 and is the author of From Tavern to
Courthouse: Architecture and Ritual in American Law, 1658-1860 (Johns
Hopkins University Press, 2004). At the Warren Center this year she is
working on her next book project: a study of the New England landscape
and its relationship to New Englanders' sense of place during the late
eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.
Jeffrey Melnick
Presenter: “Reconsidering
Race in the Built Environment”
“Project
Culture: The Popular Arts of Public Housing”
Jeffrey Melnick is associate professor of American Studies at Babson College,
and received his Ph.D. from Harvard University. His works include A
Right to Sing the Blues: African Americans, Jews, and American Popular
Song and Black-Jewish Relations on Trial: Leo Frank and Jim Conley
in the New South and Race and the Modern Artist (co-editor). Melnick
is interested in tracing out an alternative history of American housing
projects that focuses on their role as a major site for the development
of African American music.
Steven Nelson
Respondent:“Thinking
Comparatively
About the American Built Environment”
(comments not currently available)
Currently a Fellow at the Radcliffe Institute for
Advanced Study, Steven Nelson is an Assistant Professor of Art History
at the University of California, Los Angeles. His work explores the ways
that the visual cultures, architecture, and urbanism of Africa contribute
to the construction of different subjectivities on the continent. His
manuscript From Cameroon to Paris: Mousgoum Architecture and the Making
of Meaning, has been accepted for publication by The University of
Chicago Press. His next project is an urban history of Dakar, Senegal.
Nelson received his Ph.D. from Harvard.
Wendell Pritchett
Presenter: “Reconsidering
Race in the Built Environment”
“From Theory to Practice: Race, Property Values, and Suburban America in the Post-War Years”
Wendell Pritchett, received his Ph.D. from the
University of Pennsylvania, and currently teaches in that institution’s
law school. He is the author of Brownsville, Brooklyn: Jews, Blacks
and the Changing Nature of the Ghetto. His current research examines
the development of post-war urban policy, in particular urban renewal,
housing finance and housing discrimination, and he is working on a biography
of Robert Weaver, the first Secretary of Housing and Urban Development.
Mary Corbin Sies
Respondent: “Reconsidering
Race in the Built Environment”
Comments
(download pdf)
Mary Corbin Sies is Director of Graduate Studies
and an Associate Professor in the American Studies Department at the University
of Maryland. She is an affiliate faculty member of the Women's Studies
Department, the African American Studies Department, the National Center
for Smart Growth Research and Education, and a member of the Historic
Preservation faculty. Her works include Planning the American City
Since 1900 (co-editor) and "North American Urban History: The
Everyday Politics and Spatial Logics of Metropolitan Life," in the
Fall 2003 Urban History Review. Sies's interests are the study
of race, gender, class, and suburbia.. She received the Ph.D. from the
University of Michigan.
Anne
Whiston Spirn
Panelist: "Where
from Here?" Roundtable
(comments not currently available)
Anne Whiston Spirn is an author, photographer,
landscape architect, and professor of landscape architecture and planning
at MIT. Her books include The Granite Garden: Urban Nature and Human
Design (Basic Books, 1984) and The Language of Landscape (Yale,
1998). Since 1984 Spirn has worked on ecological planning and community
design and development in inner-city neighborhoods. She has taught at
Harvard and at the University of Pennsylvania, where she chaired the Department
of Landscape Architecture and Regional Planning. She received a bachelor's
degree from Harvard University, where she majored in art history, and
the master's of landscape architecture from the University of Pennsylvania.
Nancy
Stieber
Presenter:“Thinking
Comparatively About the American Built Environment”
“Autobiographies and Self-Portraits
of the City:
Comparative Sites of Urban Representation”
Nancy Stieber received her Ph.D. from the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, and currently teaches at the University of Massachusetts,
Boston. Her interests include architecture and urbanism from 1750 to the
present, particularly in Europe with a focus on the Netherlands, housing
reform, and urban representation. She is the current editor of the Journal
of the Society of Architectural Historians.
Despina
Stratigakos
Presenter: “Thinking
Comparatively About the American Built Environment”
“Transnational Comparisons
of Women as Urban Builders”
Despina Stratigakos is an architectural historian with an overarching
interest in gender and modernity in European cities. She is completing
a book, A Women's Berlin, that investigates the conception of a
city built by and for women, a place that was imagined and partially realized
in the years before World War I. Recent publications have addressed the
gender politics of the Werkbund, and connections between architectural
and sexual discourses in Weimar Germany. Stratigakos received her Ph.D.
from Bryn Mawr College and taught at Grinnell College and Illinois State
University before joining the faculty of Women, Gender and Sexuality Studies
at Harvard in 2003.
Ellen
Stroud
Chair:“Reconsidering
Race in the Built Environment”
Ellen Stroud is an assistant professor of history at Oberlin College,
where she has been teaching environmental and urban history since 2001.
Her first book, Seeing The Trees: Urbanization and Reforestation in
the Northeastern United States, is nearing completion, and she is
spending this year at the Warren Center working on her second book, Dead
As Dirt: An Environmental History of the Urban Corpse. She received
her Ph.D. from Columbia University.
Dell
Upton
Presenter: “The
History of the History of the Built Environment”
”Gehryism: American
Architecture and
the Cultural Authority of Art”
Dell Upton is Harrison Professor of Architectural History and Anthropology
at the University of Virginia. He holds a Ph.D. in American Civilization
from Brown University. Upton’s most recent book is Architecture
in the United States; among his earlier works are Holy Things and
Profane: Anglican Parish Churches in Colonial Virginia and America's
Architectural Roots: Ethnic Groups that Built America. He is currently
completing a book on urban space and public behavior in antebellum American
cities.
Camilo José
Vergara
Presenter: “Going
Public with the Built Environment”
“Images as a Tool of Discovery, the Camden Website”
Camilo José Vergara has been documenting
the changes, and often the decay, of inner city buildings and neighborhoods
throughout the nation for more than 30 years. His books (including The
New American Ghetto, American Ruins, and the forthcoming How the
Other Half Worships) and his numerious exhibitions (including Subway
Memories, currently at the Museum of the City of New York) reveal
how buildings are often the victims of the changing city scape of America.
In 2002, Vergara was awarded a MacArthur grant . His work in progress
on Camden, N.J. can be seen at www.camden.rutgers.edu/~hfcy/intro.html.
Gwendolyn Wright
Presenter: "The History
of the History of the Built Environment" “The
One and the Many: Debates about Cultural History”
Gwendolyn Wright teaches at Columbia University, and received her Ph.D.
from the University of California at Berkeley. She is the author of Building
the Dream: A Social History of Housing in America, Moralism and the
Model Home: Domestic Architecture and Cultural Conflict in Chicago, 1873-1913,
The Politics of Design in French Colonial Urbanism, and editor of
The History of History in American Schools of Architecture, 1865-1975.
She is currently finishing a book entitled Modern Architectures
in History: The United States.
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