I Live in a Hut

I Live in a Hut

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  • Author: S. E. Smith
  • Publisher:
  • ISBN:
  • Category : Poetry
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 84

Poetry. Winner of the 2011 Cleveland State University Poetry Center First Book Prize, selected by Matthea Harvey. The poems in S. E. Smith's debut collection are caffeinated, wildly comic, assured maximalist performances introducing such characters as three slutty bears, a horse thief named Dirk, Becky Home-ecky, and a pony of darkness. Divided into sections appropriately titled "Parties," "Beauty," and "Devastation," Smith's book is at once free-spirited, metaphysically inquisitive, and romantically exuberant: "If god wanted us to be strangers, why would he place us / next to each other in the movie theater and make us think / our knees are touching when they're really a few inches / apart? Looking at Anita Ekberg's breasts, we can see / the future. It is soft, pink, and frolics in a fountain / where the sea gods bathe their weary feet."


I Live in a Hut

I Live in a Hut

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  • Author: Sarah Elaine Smith
  • Publisher:
  • ISBN:
  • Category :
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 230


Living in a Hut in 21st Century South Africa

Living in a Hut in 21st Century South Africa

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  • Author: Monde Ndandani
  • Publisher: AFRICAN SUN MeDIA
  • ISBN: 1920689621
  • Category : Social Science
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 142

This book takes a closer look at a hut-homestead and a hut-village, examining the socio-economic, political and cultural life of their inhabitants.


Quonset Hut

Quonset Hut

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  • Author: Julie Decker
  • Publisher: Princeton Architectural Press
  • ISBN: 9781568985190
  • Category : Architecture
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 192

An unexpected architectural phenomenon-something like a halved tin can turned on its side-swept across the American landscape after World War II: the Quonset hut. Originally designed during the war for use as makeshift housing for soldiers and their families around the world, the seemingly ubiquitous Quonset hut housed a rapidly expanding nation in the 1940s and 1950s both at work and at play. From recording studios-a Quonset was responsible for the birth of the "Nashville sound"--To the 1948 congressional campaign headquarters of Gerald Ford, to an endless variety of incarnations including bars, movie theaters, classrooms, supermarkets, restaurants, and houses of worship, the Quonset hut was the shape of a nation in need of affordable, easy-to-build shelter. Quonset Hut: Metal Living for a Modern Age is a fascinating look at a surprising architectural sensation and offers a refreshing, revealing, and untold story of a true American icon.


Where Do I Live?

Where Do I Live?

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  • Author: Neil Chesanow
  • Publisher: Barron's Educational Series
  • ISBN:
  • Category : Juvenile Nonfiction
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 56

Part of being a child is wondering. This charming book uses easy words and color illustrations to explain to children exactly where they live. Crenshaw starts with a child's room, in his or her home, neighborhood, town, state, and county-then moves out to the planet Earth, the solar system, and the Milky Way. From there, children trace their way home again.


Americanization Studies

Americanization Studies

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  • Author:
  • Publisher:
  • ISBN:
  • Category : Americanization
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 524


Homesick

Homesick

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  • Author: Catrina Davies
  • Publisher: riverrun
  • ISBN: 9781787478664
  • Category : Cornwall (England : County)
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 368

The story of a personal housing crisis that led to a discovery of the true value of home. 'Incredibly moving. To find peace and a sense of home after a life so profoundly affected by the housing crisis, is truly inspirational' Raynor Winn, bestselling author of The Salt Path Aged thirty-one, Catrina Davies was renting a box-room in a house in Bristol, which she shared with four other adults and a child. Working several jobs and never knowing if she could make the rent, she felt like she was breaking apart. Homesick for the landscape of her childhood, in the far west of Cornwall, Catrina decides to give up the box-room and face her demons. As a child, she saw her family and their security torn apart; now, she resolves to make a tiny, dilapidated shed a home of her own. With the freedom to write, surf and make music, Catrina rebuilds the shed and, piece by piece, her own sense of self. On the border of civilisation and wilderness, between the woods and the sea, she discovers the true value of home, while trying to find her place in a fragile natural world. This is the story of a personal housing crisis and a country-wide one, grappling with class, economics, mental health and nature. It shows how housing can trap us or set us free, and what it means to feel at home.


LIVING BIG IN A TINY HOUSE.

LIVING BIG IN A TINY HOUSE.

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  • Author: BRYCE. LANGSTON
  • Publisher:
  • ISBN: 9781988550589
  • Category :
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 0


The Immigrant Press and Its Control

The Immigrant Press and Its Control

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  • Author: Robert Ezra Park
  • Publisher: Greenwood
  • ISBN:
  • Category : Aliens
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 518


A Hut of One's Own

A Hut of One's Own

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  • Author: Ann Cline
  • Publisher:
  • ISBN: 9780262287302
  • Category : Architecture
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 168

This small book on small dwellings explores some of the largest questions that can be posed about architecture. What begins where architecture ends? What was before architecture? The ostensible subject of Ann Cline's inquiry is the primitive hut, a one-room structure built of common or rustic materials. Does the proliferation of these structures in recent times represent escapist architectural fantasy, or deeper cultural impulses? As she addresses this question, Cline gracefully weaves together two stories: one of primitive huts in times of cultural transition, and the other of diminutive structures in our own time of architectural transition. From these narrative strands emerges a deeper inquiry: what are the limits of architecture? What ghosts inhabit its edges? What does it mean to dwell outside it? Cline's project began twenty-five years ago, when she set out to translate the Japanese tea ritual into an American idiom. First researching the traditional tea practices of Japan, then building and designing huts in the United States, she attempted to make the "translation" from one culture to another through the use of common American building materials and technology. But her investigation eventually led her to look at many nonarchitectural ideas and sources, for the hut exists both at the beginning of and at the farthest edge of architecture, in the margins between what architecture is and what it is not. In the resulting narrative, she blends autobiography, historical research, and cultural criticism to consider the place that such structures as shacks, teahouses, follies, casitas, and diners--simple, "undesigned" places valued for their timelessness and authenticity--occupy from both a historical and contemporary perspective. This book is an original and imaginative attempt to rethink architecture by studying its boundary conditions and formative structures.