ABSTRACT

Design and Aesthetics: A Reader is a comprehensive student reader on design history and aesthetic theory. It includes contributions from many of the writers whose work has been foundational to these two fields, including classic articles by Raymond Williams and Roger Scruton, and newer articles which provide an overview of current concerns and debates.
The role of design in the world today has aroused much controversy. The first half of this book deals with the main arguments which have emerged from contemporary analysis of its role in the communication process. Essays focus on the question of absolute aesthetic standards versus cultural relativism, and the role of objects in cultural and social life. The second part turns to particular areas of design history, ranging from architecture and pottery to the history of dress. These two main sectors are prefaced by contextualising introductions by Jerry Palmer and Mo Dodson.

part |2 pages

Part I

chapter 1|10 pages

Introduction to Part I

chapter 2|20 pages

Judging architecture

chapter 3|16 pages

Really useless ‘knowledge’

A political critique of aesthetics

chapter 6|4 pages

On materialism

chapter 7|10 pages

Problems of materialism

chapter 8|7 pages

Art and biology

chapter 10|13 pages

Need and function

The terms of a debate

part |2 pages

Part II

chapter 11|8 pages

Introduction to Part II

chapter 12|27 pages

Fashion and ontology in Trinidad

chapter 13|16 pages

Grecian fillets

chapter 14|14 pages

Designing HIV awareness strategies

An ethnographic approach

chapter 15|6 pages

The roots of inequality

chapter 16|13 pages

Art and reproduction

Some aspects of the relations between painters and engravers in London 1760–1850

chapter 17|17 pages

Design, femininity and modernism: interpreting the work of

Interpreting the work of Susie Cooper

chapter 18|22 pages

(Mis)representation of society? Problems in the relationships between architectural aesthetics and social meanings

Problems in the relationship between architectural aesthetics and social meanings