In celebration of SAH's fourth annual virtual conference, SAH and UC Press have instated free public access to the September 2024 issue of the Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians (Vol 83 No 3) through October 15, 2024. Readers may explore lessons and mysteries from the past of our built environment through scholarly articles, essays, reviews of architectural books and exhibitions, and more.
Active Society members always enjoy a complimentary subscription to the Journal and its extensive archive, but
for a limited time everyone can experience how historians connect the elements of constructed places with political, cultural, and economic issues of the relevant era and today. We encourage readers to share this free issue widely with colleagues, students, and friends.
Go to https://www.ucpress.edu/blog-posts/sah-virtual-post
to access the free content and share it with your network.
Published since 1941, JSAH is a leading English-language journal on the history of the built environment, featuring topics of study from all periods of history and all parts of the world. Issues include four to five peer-reviewed articles; reviews of recent books, exhibitions, films, and other media; a variety of editorials and opinion pieces designed to place the discipline of architectural history within a larger intellectual context; and a JSAH roundtable – a series of short essays that allows for a range of contributors to explore new research directions through a variety of lenses. JSAH is published quarterly in print and online.
What's Inside Vol 83 No 3:
Roundtable:
Race and the Built Environment in the Iberian World, ca. 1400–1800
Findings:
In Conversation with David Travers, Editor of Arts & Architecture
DANIEL DÍEZ MARTÍNEZ
Articles:
Elite Architecture and the Late Antique Ascetic Christian Communities of Cimitile and Sohag
MICHELLE L. BERENFELD
Neoclassicism, Race, and Statecraft across the Atlantic World
LOUIS P. NELSON
Teamwork at McKim, Mead & White
ALEXANDER WOOD
The Lens of Race: Whiteness and Architectural Photography at Case Study House #22
DIANNE HARRIS
Book Reviews:
The Iranian Expanse: Transforming Royal Identity through Architecture, Landscape, and the Built Environment, 550 BCE–642 CE
REVIWED BY BRUNO GENITO
Transforming the Church Interior in Renaissance Florence: Screens and Choir Spaces, from the Middle Ages to Tridentine Reform
REVIEWED BY VICTORIA ADDONA
A reconstrução da Baixa de Lisboa no século XVIII: O projecto de Manuel da Maia
REVIEWED BY SABINA D'INZILLO CARRANZA DE CAVI
Health and Architecture: The History of Spaces of Healing and Care in the Pre-modern Era
REVIEWED BY CARLA KEYVANIAN
Louise Blanchard Bethune: Every Woman Her Own Architect
REVIEWED BY KAREN MCNEILL
From Factories to Palaces: Architect Charles B. J. Snyder and the New York City Public Schools
REVIEWED BY LAURIN GOAD DAVIS
Chicagoland Dream Houses: How a Mid-century Architecture Competition Reimagined the American Home
REVIEWED BY SUSAN SINGH
The Architecture of Modern American Synagogues, 1950s–1960s
REVIEWED BY REBECCA PERTEN
Architecture and Development: Israeli Construction in Sub-Saharan Africa and the Settler Colonial Imagination, 1958–1973
REVIEWED BY ADEKUNLE ADEYEMO
Environmental Histories of Architecture
CATHERINE SEAVITT NORDENSON
Architecture of Migration: The Dadaab Refugee Camps and Humanitarian Settlement
THEODOSSIS ISSAIAS
Exhibitions:
Istanbul as Far as the Eye Can See: Views across Five Centuries
DENIZ TÜRKER
Minimum Cost Housing Group: Design for the Global Majority Project
LEE STICKELLS
The Laboratory of the Future
URTZI GRAU
Multimedia:
A Promise Deferred: Architectural Documentary in the Multimedia Age
EDWARD DIMENDBERG