The Avery Review Issue 57 [electronic resource].
The Avery Review 2022
Open access content
Bella Carmelita Carriker complicates the “public” memory of 9/11, recording the long-term violences enacted against low-income communities of color; Supriya Ambwani exposes histories of spatial violence and colonial extraction entangled in the Great Hedge of India; Gealese Peebles traces the historiographic silhouette of Norma Merrick Sklarek to scrutinize architecture’s diversity narratives; and Peter Paul Walhout unsubscribes from the internet-as-utility rhetoric in NYC that has come to stand in for questions of inequality during the COVID-19 pandemic.
https://www.librarystack.org/avery-review-issue-57-the/?ref=unknown
Architects
Architectural criticism
Architecture
Biopolitics
Border Security
Capital movements
Imperialism
Housing
Modern movement (Architecture)
Computer networks
Violence
Text
Caitlin Blanchfield
Joanna Joseph
Isabelle Kirkham-Lewitt
Jacob R. Moore
Grace Sparapani
Ife Vanable
Alissa Anderson
Tizziana Baldenebro
Aleksandr Bierig
Elsa Hoover
Kate Yeh Chiu
Bella Carmelita Carriker
Supriya Ambwani
Gealese Peebles
Peter Paul Walhout
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