The meaning of home / Edwin Heathcote
Material type:
- 9780711233775
- NA 7110 .H43 2012

Item type | Current library | Home library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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National University - Manila | LRC - Architecture General Circulation | COA General | GC NA 7110 .H43 2012 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | c.1 | Available | NULIB000007066 |
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GC NA 6600 .G46 2015 Art's principles : 50 years of hard-learned lessons in building a world-class professional services firm / | GC NA 6612 .W55 1972 c.1 Libraries for schools and universities / | GC NA 6800 .S66 1986 Sports buildings / | GC NA 7110 .H43 2012 The meaning of home / | GC NA 7125 .H38 2011 Haute spaces : residences. | GC NA 7125 .H68 1991 vol.4 Housing architecture. vol. 4 / | GC NA 7145 .P74 2009 Prefab houses = Maisons préfabriquées = Fertighäuser. |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Introduction: home is where the heart is -- 1. Acknowledgments -- 1. Front doors -- 2. Halls -- 3. Living rooms -- 4. Fireplaces -- 5. Mouldings -- 6. Books -- 7. Dining rooms -- 8. Kitchens -- 9. Stairs -- 10. Cellars & attics -- 11. Bedrooms -- 12. Cupboards & wardrobes -- 13. Bathrooms -- 14. ironmongery & hardware -- 15. Doors -- 16. Windows -- 17. Facades & faces -- 18. Bays windows & balconies -- 19. Sheds, huts and treehouses -- 20. Swimming pools -- 21. Roofs -- 22. Fences & gates -- 23. Minituratization & representation -- 24. Mirrors -- 25. Porches, verandas & decks -- 26. Lights -- 27. Floors -- 28. Walls -- 29. Corridors -- 30. Ceilings -- 31. Studies & libraries -- 32. Christmas -- 33. Columns & pillars -- 34. Pipes, wires & sewers -- Afterword: time, ghosts and the uncanny -- Bibliography -- Index.
We are so familiar with the features of our homes - the rooms, fixtures and myriad little decorative details - that we have forgotten how to look at them. We might explore a church, read a book or watch a film, and attempt to decode its symbols and references, but we rarely look at our homes with the same critical eye. Yet from the most ordinary apartment to the most extravagant mansion, every home is a deep well of meaning. From windows to wardrobes, fireplaces to doorknockers, Edwin Heathcote attempts to fathom the elements of our everyday domestic lives. He explores how, over time, ancient ritual elements transmute into practical features, and how some of these, charged with latent symbolic meaning, have persisted in modern dwellings despite having lost their original uses. Home will never quite look the same again.
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