The aim of this paper is to emphasize the position that architectural discourse should systematize the social and spatial clues within texts. This theme is conceptualized-in the way to explore how it is- as reading the spatial elements within the texts of science fiction novels and particularly, reading that of J. G. Ballard’s High Rise (Carroll & Graf Publishers NY, 1975) with the belief in necessity to convey the future predictions o
This chapter investigates the relationship between written texts and space. It asks how the spatial ...
James Graham Ballard is an author who is known as one of the keen observers of the social and accom...
In the light of the rapid proliferation of high-rise urbanism, can the science-fiction (sf) cities o...
This paper will analyze two contemporary science fiction novels, J.G. Ballard?s High-Rise and Greg B...
xxxThe fiction of J. G. Ballard is unusually concerned with spaces, both internal and exterior. Infl...
I sit curled up on my sofa, the familiar weight of a science fiction novel balanced on my knees, the...
This article addresses the role of vertical detachment in J. G. Ballard's novel High-Rise (1975/2006...
In the middle of the Seventies, when J. G. Ballard was searching a way out from the trappings of tra...
This paper investigates J.G. Ballard's vision of the house, tracing its origin to the ideas expresse...
J.G. Ballard’s texts tend to work particularly through the recognition of the component. This is mos...
J. G. Ballard’s writing confronts the potentiality of space within the contemporary landscape, artic...
In a 1962 manifesto published in New Worlds called ‘Which Way to Inner Space?’ Ballard wrote: ‘The b...
The thesis discusses the relationship between the disciplines of literature and architecture. It ope...
This book analyses the spatial politics of a range of British novelists writing on London since the1...
As a space of extremes, the skyscraper has been continually constructed as an urban frontier in Amer...
This chapter investigates the relationship between written texts and space. It asks how the spatial ...
James Graham Ballard is an author who is known as one of the keen observers of the social and accom...
In the light of the rapid proliferation of high-rise urbanism, can the science-fiction (sf) cities o...
This paper will analyze two contemporary science fiction novels, J.G. Ballard?s High-Rise and Greg B...
xxxThe fiction of J. G. Ballard is unusually concerned with spaces, both internal and exterior. Infl...
I sit curled up on my sofa, the familiar weight of a science fiction novel balanced on my knees, the...
This article addresses the role of vertical detachment in J. G. Ballard's novel High-Rise (1975/2006...
In the middle of the Seventies, when J. G. Ballard was searching a way out from the trappings of tra...
This paper investigates J.G. Ballard's vision of the house, tracing its origin to the ideas expresse...
J.G. Ballard’s texts tend to work particularly through the recognition of the component. This is mos...
J. G. Ballard’s writing confronts the potentiality of space within the contemporary landscape, artic...
In a 1962 manifesto published in New Worlds called ‘Which Way to Inner Space?’ Ballard wrote: ‘The b...
The thesis discusses the relationship between the disciplines of literature and architecture. It ope...
This book analyses the spatial politics of a range of British novelists writing on London since the1...
As a space of extremes, the skyscraper has been continually constructed as an urban frontier in Amer...
This chapter investigates the relationship between written texts and space. It asks how the spatial ...
James Graham Ballard is an author who is known as one of the keen observers of the social and accom...
In the light of the rapid proliferation of high-rise urbanism, can the science-fiction (sf) cities o...