Sticks and Stones: A Study of American Architecture and Civilization
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About This Book
The author traces American architecture through historical influences and social forces, surveying medieval village traditions, Renaissance and classical legacies, frontier settlement patterns, romantic and imperial styles, and the rise of industrial modernity. Chapters analyze how civic institutions, economic arrangements, and technological change shaped building forms, urban layouts, and community life, arguing that architecture reflects broader cultural values and conflicts. The work combines historical narrative, cultural criticism, and planning ideas to assess how past inheritances and the age of machines have conditioned American built environments and prospects for a more humane architecture.
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