Southern Built:
American Architecture, Regional Practice |
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| Catherine W. Bishir |
| 400 pages, 6 1/8 x 9 1/4 |
| 183 b&w illustrations |
| Cloth 0-8139-2538-X $75.00 |
| Paper 0-8139-2539-8 $35.00 |
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A leader in the fields of both regional architectural history
and historic preservation, Catherine Bishir has collected essays
covering three decades into one volume. Just as the subjects of
her studies are at once regional and national, the essays included
here seek to think globally while researching locally. What one
observes in the architecture of the Upper South happens throughout
the nation: national models, far from being slavishly adopted
oras some might suggestmisinterpreted through provincialism,
are adapted to be locally useful and meaningful.
Recognizing that design is seldom an isolated act, the essays
collected here explore the conditions of construction itself in
shaping communities in the Upper South. Bishir examines the roles
played by local economies and class structures as keys to understanding
building practices and results. The builders themselves take a
leading role in the story, and one of the great accomplishments
of the book is revealing not only the importance but the often
overlooked expertise of slave artisans in antebellum construction.
Bishir also traces, with striking specificity, the pathways by
which national ideas entered regional usage. The book provides
illuminating case studiesfrom an antebellum builder’s
adaptation of popular architectural books to an early twentieth
century city’s cultivation of an architecture representing
the Old South mythology. All of these illuminate the complex transformation
of national ideas into forms that express and define a region.
The book concludes with a pair of essays that treat more recent
developments to examine issues in historic preservation. Bishir
considers how monumental works coexist with more commonplace architecture,
the evolving and problematic role of preservation regulations,
and the various groups that influence preservation issues.
Eloquent and accessible enough to captivate the general reader,
Catherine Bishir’s essays speak with equal fluency to both
historians and preservation professionals and will be a permanent
addition to the study of our nation’s uncommonly diverse
architecture.
Catherine Bishir, Senior Architectural
Historian for Preservation North Carolina, is the author of numerous
works on the architecture of the Upper South, including most recently
A Guide to Historic Architecture of Piedmont North Carolina.