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The CIAM Discourse on Urbanism 1928–1960

The CIAM Discourse on Urbanism 1928–1960 (The MIT Press, 2000) is an anthology of the CIAM discussions on the doctrine of “Functional City”. The book has been compiled by Eric Mumford; foreword by Kenneth Frampton.

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The CIAM Discourse on Urbanism 1928–1960 (The MIT Press, 2000) is an anthology of the CIAM discussions on the doctrine of “Functional City”. The book has been compiled by Eric Mumford; foreword by Kenneth Frampton.

CIAM (Congrès Internationaux d’Architecture Moderne), founded in Switzerland in 1928, was an avant-garde association of architects intended to advance both modernism and internationalism in architecture. CIAM saw itself as an elite group revolutionizing architecture and city planning to serve the interests of society. Its members included some of the best-known architects of the twentieth-century, such as Le Corbusier, Walter Gropius, and Richard Neutra, but also hundreds of others who looked to it for doctrines on how to shape the urban environment in a rapidly changing world.
In this first book-length history of the organization, architectural historian Eric Mumford focuses on CIAM’s discourse to trace the development and promotion of its influential concept of the “Functional City” He views official doctrines and pronouncements in relation to the changing circumstances of the members, revealing how CIAm in the 1930s began to resemble a kind of syndicalist party oriented toward winning over any suitable authority, regardless of political orientation. Mumford also looks at CIAM’s efforts after World War II to find a new basis for a socially engaged architecture and describes the attempts by the group of younger members called Team 10 to radically revise CIAM’s mission in the 1950s, efforts that led to the organization’s dissolution in 1959.
– Eric Mumford, The CIAM Discourse on Urbanism 1928–1960 (The MIT Press, 2000), book description

The text is in English. The book is illustrated with black-and-white photos.

Our copy in stock is in good condition. The pages are clean, no markings except for the pencil inscription on the first flyleaf. The glueing of the binding shows no signs of weakening. The covers show only some minor signs of shelf wear and use.

Weight 788 g
Dimensions 21,9 × 16,7 × 2,3 cm
Author(s)

Eric Mumford, Kenneth Frampton

Publisher

The MIT Press

Publishing year

2000

Language

Images

b&w photos

Binding

Paperback

Condition

Number of pages

375

ISBN

0-262-63263-2