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Children's Lifeworlds: Gender; Welfare and Labour in the Developing World

PDF Children's Lifeworlds: Gender; Welfare and Labour in the Developing World by Olga Nieuwenhuys in Arts-Photography

Description

Childrens Lifeworlds examines how working children face the challenge of having to combine work with school in Kerala. Moving beyond the usual concern with child labour and welfare to a critical assessment of the daily work routine of children; this book questions how class and kinship; gender and household organization; state ideology and education influence and conceal the lives of children in developing countries. Presenting an extraordinarily sympathetic and detailed case study of boys and girls work routine in a south Indian village; this book shows children creating the visibility of their work. The combination of personal experience; quantitative data and in-depth anthropological methods; sheds light on the world of those who; though they hold the future; have been left in the dark.


#4296908 in eBooks 2005-06-22 2005-06-22File Name: B000OI0R8I


Review
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Five StarsBy Joe Cascioexcellent - beyond expectations0 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Great ReadBy TERRENCE PARKERThe analysis and depth of information of Frank Lloyd Wrights landscapes in this book is not only abundant; but also refreshing.27 of 28 people found the following review helpful. Essential; yet disappointingBy tertius3This is an immense; original; dense; and unique attempt to evaluate what is "outside" of Wrights artful buildings. The authors 50-year fascination with F.Ll. Wrights vaunted organic architecture and respect for nature results in the first book study of Wrights landscaping-only to discover Wright did hardly any landscaping; and what he did was often illusionary rather than natural (vide: spectacular and dramatic manipulation of artificial urns; planters; terraces; and axial markers)! The Aguars looked in the archives and; aside from impressionistic renderings or geometric exercises; they found hardly a developed site or garden plan from Wrights hand or after his early Prairie years! Consequently; the great bulk of this book is the authors reconstruction or critical evaluation of the little that is explicit. Most of their attention is perforce upon what exists on the grounds of Wright houses today; 50 or 75 years on. The late Charles Aguar; a landscape architect; interviewed owners (37 original) and subjects 85 sites to intensive site analysis to try to reconstruct what was in Wrights mind and to evaluate the pros and cons of each landscape design. (Of course theres very little about the houses themselves; or their interiors.) Some of the most fascinating designs are Wrights ventures into mass suburban planning; where Aguar can trace the evolution of his thought and practice through a series of (mostly unrealized) housing schemes. Where available he includes original planting information from the archives; but supplies none of his own for the present day. He does address admonitions for maintenance or restoration to current owners of Wright places.Aguar suggests that Wright was a far better architect than landscaper; that he was strongly influenced at specific points in his career by anti-realistic Japanese landscape design; that he became an "organic" (integrated) designer only with the development of his Taliesin estate; and that he was at his best designing and siting buildings on flat land where his geometries were least constrained by the siting analysis; soil studies; and grading plans he never made.Text and illustrations complement each other well; but some corners have unfortunately been cut when the co-author had to reduce the text to one volume. Charles Aguars lifelong devotion to studying Wright is poorly served by the tiny photos and maps; many his own. Despite taking thousands of color slides during their visits to 189 Wright sites; and publishing on heavy glossy paper; the authors include not a single color picture (the dust cover excepted). Gardeners will be immensely disappointed in this book; designers somewhat less so. There are no color schemes and hardly a decent planting scheme (at miniscule scale); but you can compile from the 13 appendices a short list of "Wrightian" species (while recognizing that most of them actually derive from the work of Griffith or Jensen; early collaborators of Wright in Chicago).For an "environmental" appreciation of Wrights buildings themselves; you might like Grant Hildenbrands The Wright Space; with its exciting visualizations of shelter; prospect; and procession within his buildings.

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