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Environmental & Architectural
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Cumulative Index (Volumes 1-19, 1990-2008)This index includes all EAP entries except reference items listed in “citations received.” Entries have been identified in the following order: volume number, issue number, and page(s). Thus 3,2:10, for example, refers to volume 3, issue 2, page 10. Volume numbers by years are as follows: vol. 1—1990; vol. 2—1991; vol. 3—1992; vol. 4—1993; vol. 5—1994; vol. 6—1995; vol. 7—1996; vol. 8—1997; vol 9—1998; vol. 10—1999; vol. 11—2000; vol. 12—2001; vol. 13—2002; vol. 14—2003; vol. 15—2004; vol. 16—2005; vol. 17—2006; vol. 18—2007; vol. 19—2008 The index categories are: Feature Essays; Thematic Issues; Book and Film Reviews; Bibliographies; Course Outlines; Poetry; Noteworthy Readings; Graduate Theses; Web Sites; News from Readers; Conferences; Organizations; Refereed Journals; Book Series; Other Publications; Obituaries; Topics. FEATURE ESSAYS Aanstoos, Christopher M., Building a Dream House Phenomenologically 17,1:11-15 Acampora, Ralph R., Human and Nonhuman Lifeworlds 3,2:10 Alexander, Christopher, Empirical Findings from The Nature of Order 18,1:11-19 Angell, Eric, Design for Nondualistic Experiences 7,1:8-10 Appelbaum, David, Home, Host, Guest 2,1:14-15 _____, Ladders, 3,1:8-9 Assefa, Enku Mulugeta, Inside and Outside in Wright’s Fallingwater and Aalto’s Villa Mairea 14,2:11-15 Bay, Alfred, Buildings, Householders, and Reconfiguring Life 6,1:11-13 Behnke, Elizabeth, Field Notes: Lived Place and the 1989 Earthquake in Northern California 1,2:10-14 Bennett, Noel, Wakeman, Jim, and McGuire, Michael, A Place in the Wild 2,2:5-7 Bergmann, Charles, Academic Animals: Making Nonhuman Creatures Matter in Universities 14,1:4-7 Berendt, Joachim-Ernst, Listening Words 12,1:6-7 _____, Petrarch on Mont Ventoux 12, 1:7-8 Boschetti, Margaret, Windows on the World: A Class Exercise 1,1:11 _____, Seeing Familiar Things in New Ways 7:3:12 Brill, Michael, An Architecture of Peril: Design for a Waste Isolation Pilot Plant, Carlsbad, New Mexico 4,3:8-10 Brittan, Gordon G., Jr., Fitting Wind Power to Landscape: A Place-Based Wind Turbine 13,2:10-15 Cameron, John, Some Implications of Malpas' Place and Experience for Place Ethics and Education 15,1:5-9 _____, Letter from Far South 19,1:13-15 Cantrell, Carol H., “The Locus of Compossibility”: Modernism and Place 10,2:10-14 Capobianco, Richard, Heidegger on Dwelling: No Heaven on Earth 11,2:9-11 Chartrand, Leon, Recovering Bear Sacredness: Insights into Phenomenal Presence of a More-than-Human world for Future Grizzly Bear Recovery Initiatives 14,1:11-13 Chawla, Louise, Reaching Home: Reflections on Environmental Autobiography 6,2:12-15 Childress, Herb, Life on Earth: San Francisco, Oostburg, and the Figure-Ground Reversal 4,2:6-7 _____, Free Public Assembly [from Landscapes of Betrayal] 11,1:9-13 Clarke, Dru, A Rite of Spring 14,2:7-8 Coates, Gary J., Reflections on Resettling America 4,2:8-9 Condon, Patrick, Phenomenological Approaches to Landscape, Place, and Design 1,3:3 Copeland, Darren, The Sounds of Displacement [a shared “listening” journey] 12,1:10-12 Day, Matthew D., Home in the Postmodern World 8,3:13-15 _____, Home in Postmodern Culture 14,2:8-10 Deaner, L. Scott, Creating the Interior Stadium: A Baseball Fan's Vicarious Experience through Radio, 18,2:11-15 Denton, David E., Notes on Bachelard's Inhabited Geometry 2,1:9-10 Desser, Chris, No Surprises: Manufactured Reality and the Extinction of Experience 13,1:10-15 de Wit, Cary, Sense of Place on the High Plains 5,2:10-11 Dumont, Marion, Place as Both Local and Boundary-less: The Puget Sound Commercial Geoduck Industry as an Example 16,2:7-9 Ediger, Jeffrey, Listening Through the Door 5,1:10-12 Enns, Susan, Losing a Sense of Century 16,1:4-5 Erickson, Thomas, Some Notes on the Experience of Being a Teleworker 9,3:9-12 Fajuans, Joel & Curry, Melanie, Why Bicylists Hate Stop Signs 13,2:8-10 Francis, Tammeron, Place, Land, and Meaning: Lessons for Making Architecture from the Adena-Hopewell 8,1:9-11 Grange, Joseph, A Normative Environmental Ethics and Christopher Alexander's Work as an Example 3,2:11-12 Greenspan, Laura, The Fox and the Peacock: A Fable for Our Time 14,1:15 Gutsche, Christopher, Child’s Table, 8,3:7-8 Harries, Karsten, Comments on Four Papers: ASCA Annual Meeting, 1991 2,3:10-12. Helphan, Benjamin R., Cairns: “Teaching a Stone to Talk,” 1999, 10,1:7-10 Hurrle, Wm Home & Journey: Two Wheels, 15,2:9-10 Issitt, Micah L., Trials of a Nascent Phenomenologist 13,3:7-8 _____, The Caged Bird’s Song 14,1:8-10 Janz, Bruce, Coming to Place 15,3:11-15 Jay, Tom, Salmon of the Heart 3,2:5 _____, Culture is a Mortal Nest 4,3:14-15 _____, The Placeless, Neighborless Realm: Language, Homescape, and Rehabilitation 7,2:13-15 _____, On Mountain Tops We are Starkly Soulful 10,3:13-14 Kazanjian, Michael M., The Architecture of Community: Phenomenology, Sprawl, and the Internet 12,2:7 _____, Phenomenology of Elevators and Escalators 13,2:7 Lappan, Mark, A Lifeworld on Water: Home and Journey on the Great Lakes 2,2:14-15 Lambert, Ian, Songs of the Sacred: A Thiis-Evensen Interpretation of LeCorbusier’s Ronchamp Chapel and Wright’s Unity Temple 9,3:13-15 Lin, Yuan, Karsten Harries' Natural Symbols and Frank Lloyd Wright's Natural Houses 2,3:13-15. Lincourt, Michel, What Is a Window? Reacting to Thiis-Evensen's Architectural Archetypes 5,3:10-13 McCann, Rachel, "On the Hither Side of Depth": An Architectural Pedagogy of Engagement, 16,3:8-19. Maley, Kenneth, Finding a Way to Rethink Sustainability 12,2:12-15 Malhere, Eric, The Spirit of Place in Les Monts de Sarcelles 13,3:5-7 Malpas, J. E., Place and Topography: Responding to Cameron and Stefanovic 15,3:8-10 _____, Disclosing the Depths of Heidegger's Topology: A Response to Relph 19,1:9-12 Million, Louise, Rocking 2,1:11-13 _____, "It Was Home: Reflections on Losing Place 5,2:12-15 _____, A World of Many Places 7,3:8-9. Mugerauer, Robert, Mircea Eliade: Restoring the Possibilities of Place 3,1:10-12 ______ & Seamon, David, Editors’ Introduction [to new edition of Dwelling, Place & Environment] 11,2:12-13 Neis, Hajo, Process, Design and Making, 8,3:5-7 Nicholsen, Shierry Weber, Adrian Stokes on Carving, Modeling, and Stone 15,2:11-12 Norberg-Schulz, Christian, [Selections from Architecture: Presence, Language, Place], 12,2:8-11 Paterson, Douglas D., Making Places: The Phenomenological Importance of the Invent{ing}ory 6,3:14-15 _____, Place and Placelessness: Fabulous Frustrations 7,3:9-10. Porteous, J. Douglas, The Mutual Impenetrability of World Discourse 3,1:10-11 _____, Direct Action and Fields of Care 14,3:9-10 _____, Environmental Intangibles 16,1:6 _____, There Was an Old Man in a Tree 18,2:7-8 Prorok, Carolyn V., Creating the Sacred from the Ordinary: The Case of Ambridge 6,3:11-13 Quillien, Jenny, Grasping the Ineffable: From Patterns to Sequences 17,3:4-10 Relph, Edward, Place, Postmodern Landscapes, & Heterotopia 3,1:14 _____, Reflections on Place and Placelessness 7,3:15-15 _____, Disclosing the Ontological Depth of Place: Heidegger's Topology by Jeff Malpas 19,1:5-8 Rone, Christine, Everglades Pilgrimage 18,3:7-9 Riegner, Mark, Goethean Science: Toward a Heightened Empathy of Nature 9,1:10-11 Roszak, Theodore, The Madness of Cities 3,1:7 Rothe, Madeleine, Phenomenology as a Research Method: The Example of Becoming at Home in a Cohousing Community 12,3:6-11 Schafer, R. Murray, A Deceptive Neighborhood: The Soundscape of Toronto's Lower Forest Hill 3,1:7 _____, Argentinean Soundscapes, November 1994 6,2:9-11 _____, The Stones 15,2:13-15 _____, I Have Never Seen a Sound 17,2:10-15 Schaffer, Barbara, Restoring the Waters 7,2:10-12 Schilling, Silke, A Goethean Study of Totnes' Town Center 17,3:8-15 Scott, Gwendolyn, At the End, 8,2:12-15 _____, Dealing with Alzheimer's Dementia Through Encountering Nature 18,2:8-10 Seamon, David, Duquesne Conference on Phenomenology and Ecology 16,2:10-15 _____, The Life of the Place: A Phenomenological Commentary on Bill Hillier's Space Syntax 4,2:10-15 _____, Making Community and Place: Commonalities and Contrasts in the Work of Danniel Kemmis and Christopher Alexander 10,3:7-12 _____, A Singular Impact: Edward Relph's Place and Placelessness 7,3:10-13 ______ & Mugerauer, Robert, Editors’ Introduction [to new edition of Dwelling, Place & Environment] 11,2:12-13 Semon, Kascha, Insidious Design: The Silent Salesman and the American Shopping Mall 17,2:8-10 Sherman, Harvey E., The Body in the House 5,3:13-15 Silverstein, Murray, Is Place a Journey? 5,1:12-15 Staples, Loretta, Slower 13,1:8-9 Stefanovic, Ingrid Leman, Sustainability, Dwelling, and Wholeness 3,2:14-15 _____, Rootedness in Place and Being-at-home 11,3:9-13 _____, Speaking of Place: In Dialogue with Malpas 15,2:6-8 Tawa, Michael, In(side)Out—the Face that Turns Towards and Looks: Chartres Cathedral, 1989, 10,1:10-15 Teague, Rodney, Intimate Immensity in the Preschool Playroom: A Topo-analysis of Children's Play 16, 1:10-15 Thiis-Evensen, Thomas, The Cutting Street, 11,3:6-8 Thompson, Laurel, Things Are Not Us but They Are Like Us, 13,3:9-15 Thorpe, Curtis E., Pittsburgh's "Hill District" as Recollected by Adults when They Were Ten Years Old, 16,1:7-9 Toombs, S. Kay, Illness and the Way of the Body, 8,2:7-9 _____, Recounting a Routine Experience: Going on a Professional Trip, 8,2: 10-12 Trevelyan, George [originally 1977], The Active Eye in Architecture 9,1:13-15 Trigg, Dylan, Memories in Site: Toward a Renewed Understanding of Starbucks 17,1:5-10 _____, Architecture and Phenomenology Conference, Haifa, Israel, May 2007 18,3:3-6 Tumlin, Eileen, A Telephone Table, 8,3:11-12 Violich, Francis, Dalmatia, Urban Identity and the War, 1991-1993: Seeking Meaning in Urban Places 4,3:11-13 Vittoria, Anne, Recollections of the House on California Road: A Phenomenological Inquiry 1,3:12-16 Walkey, Ron, Again Alexandria 7,1:11-15 Walsh, Robert M., Making a Red Chest 8,3:9-10 Wang, David, "Cezanne's Doubt" and the Phenomenological Core: Thoughts on the Production of Art 15,1:10-15 _____ & Keen, Julie, Intentionality and the Production of Architectural Design(s): An Application of Section 37 of Husserl’s Ideas 12, 3:12-15 _____ & Wagner, Sarah, A Map of Phenomenology for the Design Disciplines 18,3:10-15 Wattles, Jeffrey, Spiritual Dwelling and Environmental Ethics 3,1:13-14 Westerkamp, Hildegard, Silent Night [Soundscapes of Udaipur, Rajasthan, India, 1997] 12,1:9 Weston, Anthony, Ethics out of Place 3,1:12-13 White, Tim, Travel Drawing: Engaging the Spirit of Place 14,3:11-15 Winkler, Justin, From “Acostic Horizons” to “Tonalities” 12,1:12-14 Wong, Lin, A Phenomenology of Commuting by Bicycle 16,3:4-7. Woolf, David, Fear and Darkness, or the Seduction of the Cellar, 8,1:12-15
animals and their lifeworlds 14,1 body, illness, and environment 8,2 Christopher Alexander’s design process 8,3 Christopher Alexander's The Nature of Order 18,1 Christopher Alexander’s “Pattern Language 6,1 Edward Relph’s Place and Placelessness, 20th anniversary 7,3 environment, sacredness, and well being 4,1 Goethean science 9,1 nature, environmental ethics, and environmental design 3,2 place 15,3; 19,1 place and place experience 3,1 sacred space 10,1 sound and soundscape 12,1 technology and the designed environment13,2 water 7,2 BOOK & FILM REVIEWS Alexander, C., 1993, A Foreshadowing of 21st Century Art: The Color and Geometry of Very Early Turkish Carpets 6,1:5-10 Alexander, C., 2003 The Phenomenon of Life [vol. 1 in The Nature of Order] 13,1:4-8 Alexander, C., 2002-04, The Nature of Order, vols. 1, 2, & 4, 17,3:5-7 Alexandersson, O., 1990, Living Water: Viktor Schauberger and the Secrets of Natural Energy 5,2:6-9 Bentley, I. et al., 1985, Responsive Environments 2,2:11-13 Berendt, Joachim-Ernst, The Third Ear: On Listening to the World 12,1:5-6 Berry, Wendell, 1995, Another Turn of the Crank, 10,3:4-6 Bockemuhl, J., ed., 1985, Toward a Phenomenology of the Etheric World 5,2:5 Bortoft, H., 1996, The Wholeness of Nature: Goethe’s Way toward a Science of Conscious Participation in Nature 9,1:6-7 Bosselman, P., 1998, Representation of Places: Reality and Realism in the City, 10,1:4-6 Brenneman, W., Jr., & Brenneman, M., 1995, Crossing the Circle at the Holy Wells of Ireland 7,2:5 Casey, E. S., 1993, Getting Back into Place 6,2:7-9 Casey, E. S., 2997, The Fate of Place: A Philosophical History 10,2:5-6 Chawla, L., 1994, In the First Country of Places: Nature, Poetry, and Childhood Memory 6,3:8-9 Childress, H., 2000. Landscapes of Betrayal, Landscapes of Joy 12,3:3-5 Coates, G. J., 1997, Erik Asmusssen, Architect 11,2:6-8 Colquhoun M. & Ewald, A., 1996, New Eyes for Plants 9,1:7-9 Cooper Marcus, Clare, 1995, House as Mirror of Self: Exploring the Deeper Meaning of Home 10,2:7-9 Brand, S., 1994, How Buildings Learn 9,2:6-7 Day, C., 1990, Places for the Soul 5,3:8 Ellis, N., 1997, Architecture of Fear 9,3:7-9 Feld, S. & Basdso, H., eds., 1996, Senses of Place, 11,1:4-8 Fiffer, S. S. & Fiffer, S., 1995, Home 9,3:7-9 Fullilove, Mindy Thompson, 2004, Root Shock: How Tearing up City Neighborhoods Hurts America, and What We Can Do About It, 16,1:3-6 Greenberg, Mike, 1995, The Poetics of Cities 7,1:4-7 Hillier, Bill, 1996, Space is the Machine, 14,3:6-9 Holan, J., 1990, Norwegian Wood 5,1:6-7 Jacobson, M., Silverstein, M., & Winslow, B., 1990. The Good House 2,3:6-8 Jacobson, M., Silverstein, & Winslow, B., 2002. Patterns of Home: The Ten Esentials of Enduring Design 15,1:3-5 Jarviluoma, H., ed., 1994, Soundscapes: Essays on Vroom and Moo 7,3:4-5 Kaplan, R., Kaplan, S., & Ryan, R.L., 1998, With People in Mind 9,3:5-6 Krapfel, P., 1989, Shifting 3,2:6-8 Kunstler, J. H., 1993, The Geography of Nowhere 6,3:8-9 Landry, R., Places for the Soul: The Architecture of Chrisopher Alexander 3,3:12,13 [2 film reviews] Malpas, Jeff, Place and Experience 15,1:5-9; 15,2:6-8; 15,3:8-10 Malpas, Jeff, Heidegger's Topology, 19,1:5-12 Mugerauer, R., Interpretations on Behalf of Place 8,1:5-7 Nicholsen, Shierry Weber, 2002, The Love of Nature and the End of the World: The Unspoken Dimensions of Environmental Concern 14,2:5-7 Norberg-Schulz, C., 1988, New World Architecture 3,1:6 Rae, Douglas, 2003, Urbanism and its End 15,3:4-8 Schad,W, 1977, Man and Mammals: Toward a Biology of Form 14,1:13-14 Schwenk, T, 1965, Sensitive Chaos 7,2:6 Southworth, M. & Ben-Joseph, E., 1997, Streets and the Shaping of Towns and Cities 8,2:4-6 Steele, J., 1997, Architecture for the People: The Complete Works of Hassan Fathy 9,2:4-6 Stefanovic, Ingrid Leman, 2000. Safeguarding Our Common Future 12,2:12-15 Tetsuro, Watsji, 1961, Climate and Culture 7,1:3 Thiis-Evensen, T., 1987, Archetypes in Architecture 1,2:6-9; 1,3:9-11 Thiis-Evensen, T., 1999, Archetypes of Urbanism: A Method for the Esthetic Design of Cities 11,3:4-5 This England [periodical] 8,2:3 Tuan, Y., 1993, Passing Strange and Wonderful 5,3:9 Tuan, Y., 1996, Cosmos and Hearth: A Cosmopolite’s Viewpoint 10,3: 4-6 Tuan, Y., 1998, Escapism 11,2:5 Oldenburg, R., 1989, The Great Good Place 3,3:14-15 Olsen, W. S. & Cairns, S., 1996, The Sacred Place 9,3:7-9 Pocius, G.L., 1991, A Place to Belong: Community Order and Everyday Space in Calvert, Newfoundland 4,2:4 Richardson, P., 2004, A New Spiritual Architecture 18,2:6 Rouner, L., 1996, The Longing for Home 9,3:7-9 Van der Ryn, S. & Cowan, S., 1996, Ecological Design 8,1:7-8 Wann, D., 1996, Deep Design: Pathways to a Livable Future 8,1:7-8 Wilson, A., 1992, The Culture of Nature 5,1:8-9
Bibliography for Environmental and Architectural Phenomenology [up to 2000 & in three installments], 11, 1:14-15; 11,2:14-15; 11,3:14-15 Works by Karsten Harries 2,3:12 Works by Juhani Pallasmaa 12,2:5-6 Works by Edward Relph 3,1:15
COURSE OUTLINES Psychology of Place [taught by Eva Simms, Duquesne University] 17,2:6-7
Eiler, Timothy, Floor, Wall, and Roof? (For Thomas Thiis-Evensen) 10,2:15 Hill, Judyth, When You Are Receptacle, You Become Mule’s Ears, 10,2:15 _____, Walking the Fields of Vision 10,3:15 _____, The Economics of Generosity 12,1:15 Kahoe, Richard D., Oklahoma Homecoming 4,3:15 Kherdian, David, When These Old Barns Lost Their Inhabitants... 4,2:15 Nelms, Sheryl L., Fog, 10,2:15 Rhone, Christine, Hopi Navigation 11,3:13 Richardson, Miles, Vistas Make You Think 2,2:10 _____, An Aging Academic at a Conference 6,1:14 _____, Buga 10,3:14 Scott, G., On Leaving a House 3,1:14 _____, Hard Water Walking 6,1:14 Yesko, Jill, Reading a Map 2,2:10 _____, Do Not Ask Me to Explain 3,1:15
Alexander, C., 1991, A New Way of Looking 3,1:3 Benedickt, M., ed., 1988, Center: Buildings and Reality (vol. 4) 1,1:8 Buess, M., 1992, Getting to Know the Landscape: The Gobenmatt 6,3:5-6 Burch, R., 1989, On Phenomenology and Its Practice 1,2:5 Chaffin, V. F., 1989, Dwelling and Rhythm: The Isle Brevelle as a Landscape of Home 1,3:5 Cheney, J., 1989, Postmodern Environmental Ethics 1,1:9 Cloke, P. et al, 1991, Approaching Human Geography 3,3:6 Condon, P. M., 1991, Radical Romanticism 3,1:4 Corner, J., 1990, A Discourse on Theory I 2,3:3 Davis, D, 1989 Ecophilosophy 1,1:8 Davis, T., 1989, Photography and Landscape Studies 1,1:9-10 Fetterman, D. M., 1988, Qualitative Approaches to Evaluation in Education 1,1:10 Freund, P. & Martin, G., 1993, The Ecology of the Automobile 6,3:7 Glassie, Henry, 2000, Vernacular Architecture, 12,2:4 Goethe, J. von, 1990, Goethe's Botanical Writings 2,2:4 Hargrove, E. C., 1989, Foundations of Environmental Ethics 3,2:3 Heelan, P., 1983, Space-Perception & the Philosophy of Science 1,2:4 Hertzberger, H., 1991, Lessons for Students in Architecture 7,3:3-4 Hufford, M., 1986, One Space, Many Places: Folklife and Land Use in New Jersey's Pinelands National Reserve 1,1:6 Jacobs, J., 1993 [1961]. Death and Life of Great American Cities 6,2:6 Jones, E., 1989, Reading the Book of Nature 4,3:5-6 Jones, L., 2000, The Hermeneutics of Sacred Architecture: Experience, Interpretation, Comparison 12,1:4 King, I., 1993, Christopher Alexander & Contemporary Architecture 6,1:3-4 Lane, B. C., 1988, Landscapes of the Sacred 4,1:4-5 Malpas, J.E., 1999, Place and Experience: A Philosophical Topography 12,3:2; 13,3:4-5 [selections] Markovich, N. et al, eds, 1990, Pueblo Style & Regional Architecture 3,1:4-5 Paul Murrain, 1993, Urban Expansion: Look Back and Learn 6,2:5-6 Mugerauer, R., 1990, Post-Modern Planning Theory 3,3:6 Paterson, D., 1991, Fostering the Avant-Garde Within 3,1:4 _____, 1993, Dualities & Dialectics in the Experience of Landscape 5,3:7 Perrella, S., ed., 1988, Form; Being; Absence 1,1:6-8 Phenomenology & Human Sciences 2,2:4 Phenomenology + Pedagogy, 1990 2,3:3 Phenomenology + Pedagogy, 1991 4,3:5-7 Paterson D. D., 1993, Design, Language, and the Preposition 6,2:4-5 Rattner, D. M., 1993, Moldings 5,3:6-7 Relph, E., 1989, Responsive Methods, Geographical Imagination & the Study of Landscapes 1,3:6 Rosenau, P. M., 1992, Post-Modernism and the Social Sciences 3,3:5 Sanders, S. R., 1993, Staying Put: Making a Home in a Restless World, 8,3:5 Silverstein, M., 1993, Mind & the World: Interplay of Theory & Practice 6,1:4-5 Smith, T. S., 1989, Ojibwe Persons: Toward a Phenomenology of an American Lifeworld 2,2:3 Stefanovic, I. L., 1992, Housing Quality from a Phenomenological Perspective 5,3:6 Sucher, D., 1995, City Comforts 6,3:5 Toulmin, S., 1990. Cosmopolis: The Hidden Agenda of Modernity 2,1:5 van Manen, M., 1990. Researching Lived Experience 2,1:4 von Meiss, P., 1990, Elements of Architecture: From Form to Place 2,1:3 Weiner, J. F., 1991, The Empty Place: Poetry, Space, and Being among the Foi of Papua, New Guinea 3,3:4 Whone, H., 1990, Church Monastery Cathedral 4,1:6 Whyte, William, The Social Life of Small Urban Spaces [reprinted] 13,3:1 Whyte, William, The Essential William Whyte 13,3:1 Zajonc, A., 1991, Light & Cognition 3,2:3 Zimmerman, M. E., 1990, Heidegger's Confrontation with Modernity 2,3:4-5
Assefa, Enku Mulugeta, Interpreting Frank Lloyd Wright’s Fallingwater and Alvar Aalto’s Villa Mairea Using Karsten Harries’ Natural Symbols and Thomas Thiis-Evensen’s Architectural Archetypes 14,2:11-15 Barnes, A., 1992, Mount Wellington and Day, M., 2003, Home in the Western World: A Cultural-Hermeneutic Study 14,2:8-10 Francis, T., 1995, A Phenomenology of Prehistoric Native American Architecture and its Landscape Context... 5,3:4 Koop, Theano Terkenli, 1994, The Idea of Home... 5,3:4 Lin, Y., 1991, A Phenomenological Interpretation of Modern Sacred Architecture Based on Thiis-Evensen's Archetypes in Architecture 3:3:7-8 Million, M. L., 1992, "It Was Home": A Phenomenology of Place and Involuntary Displacement...3,3:8-9; 5,2:12-15 Munro, K. A., 1991, Planning for Place: Phenomenological Insights in Urban Design 3,3:9 Ramaswami, M., 1992, Toward a Phenomenology of Wood... 3,3:10-11 Tadych, Christopher, 1993, Architecture as Cultural Dialogue... 5,3:4-5 NEWS FROM READERS Abrams, David 1,2:14-15 Acampora, Ralph 2,3:5 Augusto, Eduardo Frederico 16,3:2 Aldrich, Tony 9,3:3 Alitalo, Simon 5,2:4 Barrie, Thomas 12,2:6 Bay, Alfred 3,2:3 Behnke, Betsy 5,1:4 Beyers, Jeffrey 11,1:3 Birkeland, Inger 18,1:3 Bogner, Rosmarie 11,3:3 Bok, Roxanne 13,2:3-4 Boschetti, Margaret 14,2:2 Bott, Suzanne 12,1:3-4 Boughan, Trajn 9,3:3 Burch, Robert 2,1:6 Buttimer, Anne 11,1:2 Canizaro, Vincent 9,1:3 Capobianco, Richard 2,3:5 Cohill, Andrew 3,2:2; 6,1:3; 6,3:3; 14,3:2 Conrey, Sean M. 17,1:2 Cooper Marcus, Clare 11,1:3 Day, Linda 5,1:4 Day, Matthew 6,3:3; 8,1:3-4 Denton, David E. 1,3:8 Drum, Ryan 5,3:3; 9,2:3; 10,2:4; 13,3:4; 14,1:3 Dyson, Bruce 6,2:2 Easterly, Richard 14,3:2 Ediger, Jeffrey 4,2:2 Erickson, Tom 6,3:4 Eithne O’Neill, Máire 13,2:4 Evenden, Len 9,1:4 Ferreira de Mello, Joao Baptista 2,1:6 Ford, Chris 5,2:4 Francis, Tammeron 5,3:4 Gobster, Paul 1,2:14 Gomer, Gary 11,2:4 Habiger, Robert 3,3:3 Haydon, Rich 5,1:4 Hill, Judyth 9,2:3 Hillis, Ken 3,2:2 Hoekstra, Daan 9,3:4; 10,3:3 Hopkins, Arlene 7,1:2; 11,2:4 Horner, Randi 1,2:15 Hurrle, William 8,2:2 Issitt, Micah 12,3:2 Jay, Tom 10,1:3 Johnson, Norris Brock 6,2:2-3 Keiffer, Artimus 6,2:3 Kilickiran, Didem 11,1:3-4 Kirby, V.G. 5,3:4 Kirchoff, Bruce K. 8,2:2 Koblentz, Evelyn Dunn 1,3:6; 9,1:4 Koop, Theano Terkenli 5,1:5; 5,3:4 Kruger, Linda 5,2:4 Krapfel, Paul 9,3:4; 12,2:6 Leitch, Graeme 6,1:3 LeStrange, Renée 5,2:4; 9,3:4 Lincourt, Michel 5,1:5 Lowitz, Ted 12,1:4; 14,1:3 MacWilliams, Deborah 12,2:6-7 McIntyre, Suzanne 6,2:3 Malpas, Jeff 17,2:3; 17,3:2 Mann, John Bright 1,3:7. Martin, Evelyn 2,1:6 May, J. Bruce 4,1:2 Mazur-Stommen, Susan 16,3:2 Memmott, Paul 16,1:2 Miller, Mark 4,3:3; 10,2:4; 15,1:2; 16,3:2; 17,1:3 Mroczek, Russell 1,2:15 Mukerjee, Ashish 5,3:4 Nemirovsky, Ricardo 13,1:3 Pallasmaa, Juhani 12,2:5-6; 13,1:4 Perez, Matha 12,3:2 Pignatelli, Paola Coppola 5,2:4 Potas, Warren A. 3,2:2-3 Quintero, Nelida 13,2:4 Rhone, Christine 11,3:3; 17,1:3 Richardson, Miles 2,2:2; 10,3:4 Rothenberg, David 1,2:14 Russell, James A. 1,3:6. Russo, David 8,2:2 Saile, David 2,2:2 Salanki, Paul 14,1:3 Salmon, Nick 5,1:5 Salstrom, Debra 14,3:2 Schafer, R. Murray 4,2:2 Schilling, Silke 16,3:2 Scully, Michael J. 6,1:3 Seamon, David 11,2:4; 17,3:2 Shanahan, Derek 11,1:4 Sherry, Jr., John F. 3,3:3 Steele, John 4,2:2 Steiner Davis, Miriam 16,1:2 Tadych, Christopher 5,3:4 Thiis-Evensen, Thomas 4,3:2 Thoma, Heather 14,1:3 Townley, John 9,2:3 Valbracht, David 1,2:15 Valentine, Judith 4,3:3 Vitulano, Karen 17,2:3 Wageley, Bethany 7,1:2 Weisenburger, Ray 15,1:2 Wells, Malcolm 7,2:4 Whilhite, Elizabeth 1,3:7 Williamson, Jack 15,1:2 Winkler, Justin 3,2:5; 5,1:5; 6,2:3; 9,1:4-5 Wu, Kingsley K. 1,2:7; 5,3:5; 7,2:4; 13,1:4 Yesko, Jill 2,2:3
Archeology of Consciousness 8,3:2 Architecture and Place Conference 4,1:2-3 Architecture and the Great Plains 3,3:2 Architecture and Healing 7,1:1 Architecture and Phenomenology 17,2:1; 18,3:3-6 Architecture, Soul, and the City 6,2:1 Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture 2,3:9 Association for the Study of Literature and Environment (ASLE) 6,1:2; 8,2:2; 18,3:1 Avoiding the Anyplace Syndrome, 2,3:2 Built Form and Culture, 2,2:2; 8,2:1 The Car in History, 15,3:2 Communication and Environment 6,1:2; 8,1:1 Contemplative sustainable Design 17,2:2 Culture and Space in Home Environments 8,1:1 Democracy and Sustainability 11,3:2 Defining Space 18,2:3 Environment and Community 12,1:2; 13,1:2 Environmental Design Research Association (EDRA), 1,1:4; 1,3:2; 1,3:3; 2,1:5; 3,3:1; 4,3:1-2; 4,3:2; 5,1:2; 5,3:2; 6,1:1,15; 6,3:2; 8,1:2; 10,3:2; 11,2:4; 12,2:2; 18,1:2; 18,3:2 Environmental Music Week 6,2:1 Experience in Design-Build 12,2:2 Gaston Bachelard: Matter, Dream, and Thought 13,3:2 Greening of the Campus 10,2:2; 12,2:2 Human Science Research Conference, 1,2:2; 3,2:1; 6,2:1; 7,1:1;10,1:1; 11,1:1; 12,1:1; 13,1:2; 15,2:2; 16,1:2; 17,1:2; 19,1:2 International Association for Environmental Philosophy 11,2:3; 11,3:2; 13, 2:314,2:2; 14,3:1; 16,2:2; 17,1:1; 17,2:2; 18,1:2; 19,1:2 International Association for People-Environment Studies (IAPS) 9,1:2; 10,3:1 International Association for the Study of Environment, Space, and Place 19,1:2 International Planning History Conference 11,1:2 International Qualitative Research Association 7,3:2; 12,2:2 International Society of Phenomenology and Literature 10,1:1 International Symposium on Acoustic Ecology 14,1:2 Jean Gebser Conference 16,2:2 Kinship with All Life 12,2:2 Making Cities Livable 8,1:3; 9,1:2; 11,1:2; 12,1:2 Making Sacred Spaces, 8,2:1 Millenium Spirituality and Sustainability Conference 11,2:3 Natural City Conference 15,2:2 North American Interdisciplinary Conference on Environment and Community 10,1:2; 11,1:2 Ornament of Classical Architecture 6,3:2 Phenomenology, Fine Arts, and Aesthetics 11,1:1 Phenomenology of Childhood 12,2:2 Phenomenology of John Paul II 17,2:2 Place in American Culture 1,2:2 Qualitative Research in Education 9,1:2; 10,3:1 Radical Prince: The Integral Vision of HRH the Prince of Wales 15,1:2 Renew the Face of the Earth: Phenomenology and Ecology 16,1:2; 16,2:11-15 Rural Planning & Development: Visions of the 21st Century, 2,1:2 Senses of Place 17,1:2 Space Syntax Conference 8,2:2; 9,1:2 Spirit of Place symposium, 1,1:4; 4,1:2 Spirit of Trees 13,3:2 Social Issues and the Environment, 12,1:2 Society for Phenomenology and Existential Phenomenology (SPHS) 4,2: 1; 5,2:2; 6,2:1; 7,2:1; 8,2;1; 10,2:1; 11,1:1; 12,1:1; 14,2:2; 14,3:1; 15,2:2; 16,2:2; 17,1:1 Society for Phenomenology and the Human Sciences (SPHS), 1,2:2; 2,2:2; 4,2:1; 5,2:2; 6,2:1; 7,2:1; 8,2:1; 10,2:1; 11,1:1;12,1:1; 14,2:2; 14,3:1; 15,2:2; 16,2:2; 17,1:1 Technology and the Body, 15,3:2 Tuning of the World 3,3:2 Unlimited by Design 9,1:2 Usable Design History 11,2:3 Vision, Culture, and Landscape, 1,2:2 Visual Culture of American Religions 10,3:1 What Makes a City Conference 5,1:3 Writing on the Land: John Burroughs and His Legacy 17,1:2
American School of Geomancy 6,2:3 Ancient Philosophy Society 10,2:2 Architecture Alive 19,1:4 Assoc. for the Study of Literature & Environment (ASLE) 5,1:1; 6,1:2 Biosphere 2 Center 8,3:2 Building Process Alliance 18,1:2 California Institute of Integral Studies 13,2:3 Canadian Society for Hermeneutics and Postmodern Thought 1,3:4 Center for Advanced Research in Phenomenology 10,3:3 Center for Psychology & Social Change 7,2:2 Center for Reflection on the Second Law 3,2:2 Center for Respect of Life and Environment 2,3:2; 11,2:3; 11,3:2 Center for Environmental Art and Humanities 8,2:2; 11,3:2 Center for Experiential Notation 1,2:3 Coalition for Education in the Outdoors 4,1:1 Cob Cottage Company 6,2:2 Cultural Aspects of Design 1,2:15 Dallas Institute 5,1:3; 13,3:2 Development of Urban Green Spaces 13,1:2 Earth Ethics Research Group 3,1:2 Ecological Design Association 10,2:2; 13,3:2 Ecological Design and Research Institute 1,2:2 Ecosa Institute 12,2:2; 13,3:2 Emerson College, Environmental Design Course 5,3:3 Environmental Structure Research Group 18,2:3 Environmental Writing Institute 10,2:2; 11,2:3; 12,2:2; 13,2:3; 14,1:2; 15,2:2; 16,2:2 Fellowship for Intentional Community 7,2:2; 11,2:3 Forum on Religion and Ecology 13,3:2 Front Porch 7,3:2 Geography of Religions & Belief Systems 4,2:2 Global Response 7,1:2 Green Cross Society 7,1:2 Green Earth Foundation 2,1:2 He |