We are pleased to exhibit at the 2024 meeting of the Society of Architectural Historians in Albuquerque, NM, from April 17 – 21, 2024, and offer a discount on all of our new and award-winning books on Architecture, Urban Studies, and more. Browse our list of new and recent titles, chat with Director and Acquiring Editor Robert Devens, and enjoy a great discount!
Apply the discount code UTXSAH during checkout to receive 30% off the full list price of any book for domestic orders, plus free domestic shipping. Offer valid through May 31, 2024. Free standard U.S. domestic shipping is included. Browse featured books below!
Below is a schedule of our authors presenting their work:
Panel | Time | Location |
---|---|---|
Paul Neill, Transnational Mobility, Space, and Place-making in the Global South | 4/18 8:30 AM | Cochiti |
Stella Nair, Under Construction: Architectural Histories of the Building Site | 4/18 11:00 AM | Acoma/Zuni |
Catherine Seavitt Nordenson, Plants as Technological Objects; Plants as Technological Subjects | 4/18 11:00 AM | Cochiti |
James Michael Buckley, The Politics of Landscape: J.B. Jackson in the Contemporary World, Session Co-Chair | 4/18 3:00 PM | Isleta/Jemez |
Kathryn O’Rourke, Architectural Modernism in the Mexico-US Borderlands, Session Chair | 4/20 8:30 AM | Picuris |
Stephen Fox, Architectural Modernism in the Mexico-US Borderlands | 4/20 8:30 AM | Picuris |
Lateral Exchanges
Edited by Bruno Carvalho and Alison Isenberg
Learn more about the series
Lateral Exchanges is devoted to architecture and urbanism in the context of globalization and hemispheric connections. Publishing research on historical and contemporary issues in design and the built environment, unrestricted by geographic focus, the series covers several interrelated fields, including architecture, environmental humanities, history, landscape architecture, media and visual studies, planning, and urban studies. The series addresses the circulation of architectural and urban-planning models, concepts, and realized constructions, as well as the circulation of designers themselves, across continents, countries, marketplaces, and languages. It is concerned with the ways that these concepts and techniques have instigated cultural and intellectual exchanges beyond disciplinary boundaries and locales, asking how we should historicize and theorize these exchanges, particularly in the context of persistent global asymmetries.