The Avery Review Issue 51 [electronic resource].
The Avery Review 2021
Open access content
Roberto Boettger reframes what is being conserved at Tijuca National Park and denaturalizes the project of conservation behind UNESCO’s first “urban cultural landscape”; Ella Comberg seeks views of the street beyond what Doug Rickard’s A New American Picture, and Google, ask us to see; Alexyss McClellan-Ufugusuku extends the recent COVID-19 outbreak at Marine Corps Air Station Futenma to legacies of dual colonization and militarization in Okinawa; Karamia Müller revisits her architectural education alongside the imperial conception of land that came with it; and Malcom Rio and Aaron Tobey examine the design of injustice in the case of the courthouse.
https://www.librarystack.org/the-avery-review-issue-51/?ref=unknown
Architects
Architectural criticism
Architecture
Technology and the arts
Art--Study and teaching
Imperialism
Data mining
Ecology
Photographic criticism
Racism
Sustainable development
City planning
Text
Caitlin Blanchfield
Joanna Joseph
Isabelle Kirkham-Lewitt
Jacob R. Moore
Alissa Anderson
Jordan H. Carver
Elsa Hoover
Ana María León
Nasra Abdullahi
Roberto Boettger
Ella Comberg
Alexyss McClellan-Ufugusuku
Karamia Müller
Malcom Rio
Aaron Tobey
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