Hut of One's Own : Life Outside the Circle of Architecture

by
Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 1998-04-24
Publisher(s): MIT PRESS
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Summary

This small book on small dwellings explores some of the largest questions that can be posed about architecture. What begins where architecture ends? What was before architecture? The ostensible subject of Ann Cline's inquiry is the primitive hut, a one-room structure built of common or rustic materials. Does the proliferation of these structures in recent times represent escapist architectural fantasy, or deeper cultural impulses? As she addresses this question, Cline gracefully weaves together two stories: one of primitive huts in times of cultural transition, and the other of diminutive structures in our own time of architectural transition. From these narrative strands emerges a deeper inquiry: what are the limits of architecture? What ghosts inhabit its edges? What does it mean to dwell outside it? Cline's project began twenty-five years ago, when she set out to translate the Japanese tea ritual into an American idiom. First researching the traditional tea practices of Japan, then building and designing huts in the United States, she attempted to make the "translation" from one culture to another through the use of common American building materials and technology. But her investigation eventually led her to look at many nonarchitectural ideas and sources, for the hut exists both at the beginning of and at the farthest edge of architecture, in the margins between what architecture is and what it is not. In the resulting narrative, she blends autobiography, historical research, and cultural criticism to consider the place that such structures as shacks, teahouses, follies, casitas, and diners--simple, "undesigned" places valued for their timelessness and authenticity--occupy from both a historical and contemporary perspective. This book is an original and imaginative attempt to rethink architecture by studying its boundary conditions and formative structures.

Table of Contents

Preface viii(2)
Opening Interval: The Hut in My Mind x
one Primitive Huts
2(36)
Life in the Margins
3(4)
Habitations
7(8)
What Is Really at Stake
15(6)
Landscapes Recalled
21(6)
Interval: The Hut in the Backyard
27(11)
two Experimental Lives
38(32)
Cabinets of Curiosity
39(6)
Little Houses of Pleasure
45(7)
Ritual, Freedom, and Bondage
52(5)
Avant- or Arriere-garde?
57(6)
Interval: The Hut in the Rotunda
63(7)
three Ritual Intentions
70(36)
Vision(s)
71(7)
Uncanny Arts and Untenured Lives
78(6)
Inside the Stretch Limo
84(8)
Making Believe
92(5)
Interval: The Hut as Gallery
97(9)
four Architects in Transition
106(27)
Taken for Granted
107(6)
What Architecture Is
113(4)
What Architecture Isn't
117(6)
A Hut of One's Own
123(7)
Closing Interval: The Hut in the Wasteland
130(3)
Acknowledgments 133(5)
Notes 138(5)
Illustration Credits 143(3)
Index 146

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