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Dissecting the Danchi : Inside Japan’s Largest Postwar Housing Experiment / by Tatiana Knoroz

Publisher (Singapore : Springer Nature Singapore : Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan)
Year 2022
Edition 1st ed. 2022.
Authors *Knoroz, Tatiana author
SpringerLink (Online service)

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OB00187970 Springer Social Sciences eBooks (電子ブック) 9789811684609

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Material Type E-Book
Media type 機械可読データファイル
Size XXV, 201 p. 99 illus., 60 illus. in color : online resource
Notes Chapter 1. The Birth of the Concrete Box -- Chapter 2. The Refugees of the Lost Decades -- Chapter 3. Re-positioning Ethnography in Architecture
“‘Dissecting the Danchi’ takes an unusually in-depth and insightful look behind closed doors of Japanese state-subsidised, suburban housing estates. These buildings were once the pinnacle of modernity and innovation, but the aging structures and their ‘unconventional’ inhabitants have long since become stigmatised and labelled as undesirable by the mainstream. The book is endlessly rich and unique in that it combines Knoroz’ imaginative architectural perspective with the kind of deep ethnography that many anthropologists aspire to. A brilliant bonus lies in her unveiling of “Devicology”; a new methodology to study interior environments more effectively and positively impact on regeneration policies. This is a fascinating and much-needed study of contemporary Japanese homes that will engage readers interested in urban housing issues worldwide as well as those drawn to the complexities and ambiguities of Japanese society.” – Inge Daniels, Professor of Anthropology, University of Oxford. Author of The Japanese House, Material Culture in the Modern Home. The book is the first to trace the history of the Japanese public housing program balancing on the rarely explored edge between architecture and ethnography. In the 1960s, when Japan's postwar economy boomed, architects and urban planners inspired by Western modernism and Soviet mass-housing created danchi – clusters of uniform multi-story apartment buildings with standardized interiors, designed to shape new modernized lifestyles for populations turned into refugees by the war. Over time, as Japan's society aged and the economy began to stagnate, these structures have become a popular backdrop for contemporary horror movies and a burden for the government. In this closely researched monograph, Tatiana Knoroz sheds unexpected light on the fate of danchi’s nation-transforming interiors, and proposes a multidisciplinary research method for their ongoing regeneration, which will be of interest to architects, historians and anthropologists. Tatiana Knoroz is a scholar with a special interest in Japanese housing, anthropology of lived space and built environment
HTTP:URL=https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-16-8460-9
Subjects LCSH:Political sociology
LCSH:Urban economics
LCSH:Asia—Politics and government
LCSH:Architecture
FREE:Political Sociology
FREE:Urban Economics
FREE:Asian Politics
FREE:Architecture
Classification LCC:JA76
DC23:306.2
ID 8000079250
ISBN 9789811684609

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