The term ‘social distance’ was once only a vague metaphor to describe the relationship between different social groups. Yet it has acquired a precise meaning as the mandatory minimum distance for face-to-face interactions: 1, 1.5, or 2 metres (or 6 feet), depending on the jurisdiction. But what is the appropriate distance from which to interpret a pandemic? Rather than asserting a diagnosis of the contemporary emergency, the issueSocial Distanceoffers perspectives from architectural history and theory. From the great plague of Venice to cholera in the industrializing city, from the human placenta to the 1960s or the bubble office of today, the fifthgta papersprovides a broad range of reflections on contagion, disease, and health.
Adam Jasper
Annmarie Adams, Gregorio Astengo, Chair of the History and Theory of Urban Design, Irina Davidovici, Didem Ekici, Caroline A. Jones, Christa Kamleithner, Jeanne Kisacky, Anne Kockelkorn, Miloš Kosec, Reinhold Martin, Stanislaus von Moos, Cathelijne Nuijsink, Laila Seewang, Lukas Stadelmann, David Theodore, Leslie Topp, Daniel Weiss, Alex Winiger, Markus Wörgötter, Lydia Xynogala
büro uebele
2021.21 × 29.7 cm,softcover 198 pages, 109 illustrations ISBN 978-3-85676-415-9 Text inEnglish