"Paul Betts first came to my attention through his pioneering article on the post-1945 Bauhaus myth as a joint German-American venture. This book is a landmark study of cultural continuities and ruptures, institutional realignments, and individual careers that introduces a breath of fresh air into a field of research long staled by received ideas. It demonstrates the rewards of approaching the years from 1933 to 1945 as a revealing window onto the subsequent history of West Germany."—Wolfgang Schivelbusch "The Authority of Everyday Objects is a small gem of the new cultural history. This is a work of striking originality and insight that fits the development of industrial design in postwar Germany into the country's broader social, cultural and political history, constructing an analytical narrative that carries from the Third Reich into the Cold War. It illuminates not merely cultural transformation but the wider social history of twentieth-century Germany."—Stanley G. Payne, author of A History of Fascism, 1914-1945 "The Authority of Everyday Objects is a refreshing, innovative, and convincing approach to post-World War II Western consumer society. Design—as a weapon in Cold War competition and as a vehicle for German redemption by revitalizing Bauhaus traditions—is thoroughly researched and wonderfully presented in Paul Betts' book. This well-illustrated work convinces the reader that design was a part of gluecklich Leben ("lucky life") and schoen wohnen ("beautiful living"), and a factor in the politicization of material culture."—Ivan T. Berend, author of Decades of Crisis: Central and Eastern Europe before World War II and History Derailed: Central and Eastern Europe in the Long Nineteenth Century
They should, in short, be things of beauty. In an age of feeble and ugly machine-made things, these essays call for us to deepen and transform our relationship with the objects that surround us.
This book is about the objects people owned and how they used them.
A History of Everyday Things is a pioneering essay that sheds light on the origins of the consumer society and its social and political repercussions, and thereby the birth of the modern world.
A major new history of post-war Europe.
... “ Affordance - Based Design Methods for Innovative Design , Redesign and Reverse Engineering " ; Ivan Mata , Georges Fadel , and Gregory Mocko , " Toward Automating Affordance - Based Design , " AI EDAM : Artificial Intelligence for ...
A history of private life in the German Democratic Republic, showing how the private sphere assumed central importance in the GDR from the very outset, and revealing the myriad ways in which privacy was expressed, staged and defended by ...
... objects to embody ideas about nation and race, materiality played an important role in their various projects.9 What happened to this cultural legacy after 1945? In his book The Authority of Everyday Objects, Paul Betts concisely ...
Bee-Bot and tell the children that, in pairs, their task is to find out as many things about the Bee-Bot as they can: What does it do? How might it work? What does each button do? Can they tell a partner? They could then work in pairs ...
Lon- don: V & A Publications, 2006. Linley, David. Extraordinary Furniture. London: Mitchell Beazley, 1996. SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY Jib Door Boyer, Marie-France, and François Halard. The Private Realm of Marie Antoinette.
... objects of Ronald Bladen and Sol LeWitt in “Entropy and the New Monuments.” 25. Rudolf Arnheim, Entropy and Art: An Essay ... The Authority of Everyday Objects: A Cultural History of West German Industrial Design (Berkeley: University of ...