Modern Architectures of North AmericaMain MenuHelp! Help! Help!SuburbiaArchitecture Relating to the Natural EnvironmentPatients, Prisoners, PoliticsIdentity: What Lies Beneath Style and FormChange and AdaptationErica Morawski - The Hotel Nacional de Cuba: Making Meanings and Negotiating NationalismsAmanda - Organic Architecture/F.L. WrightSteph - Moorish Revival ArchitectureBrittney - Sustainable Urban DesignsThe Shift: Art Deco & Modernismby Bayleigh BoganTransition to Streamline ModerneSydney - The Coppelia Ice Cream Shop in Havana, Cuba: A Cultural Moment ManifestedKatie - LevittownGenevieve - The Multifaceted Development of Creole ArchitectureThe Former Church of the Holy Communion: A Specific Example of Change and Adaptation of a Single Building Over TimeRe-Purposing a Religious BuildingZarah Ferrari: Tule Lake Segregation Center: Rising Above an Unjust SystemZarah FerrariLaura - The Suburban Kitchen in Levittown, PABy Laura Krok-HortonMarianna Mapes, Disease and the Body Politic: The National Leprosarium at Carville, LouisianaLiz - Eichler, Neutra, and the mid-century Californian SuburbV. Nash- Berkeley City Women's Club (1929), Berkeley, CA, Julia MorganJulia Morgan was a West Coast architect.Metropolitan Museum of Art: A Transition to ModernismBrendan - Academy of Music
Garden
12016-03-28T18:25:16-07:00Zarah Ferrarifce7cef03458dbb9b1eca281924074181a2de91081806plain2016-04-18T21:34:15-07:00Zarah Ferrarifce7cef03458dbb9b1eca281924074181a2de910Countering the disparaging design of the buildings, and unable to use their bodies and voices in protest, the Japanese American detainees revolted against their treatments instead through the architecture. One of the mechanisms through which the Japanese Americans achieved this was through gardens. The Japanese Americans not only used the gardens as “acts of resistance” but often used “their environmental conditions to get actual concessions from the War Relocation Authority” (Academic Spotlight Faculty Research, Performance and Exhibitions). By creating more normalized worlds within the camps, the Japanese Americans began to push back against stereotypes that labeled them as a dangerous ‘other’ worthy of being separated from society.
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12016-03-28T18:12:27-07:00Zarah Ferrarifce7cef03458dbb9b1eca281924074181a2de910Tule Lake Garden3Tule Lake Relocation Center Newell, California. Evacuee Flower Garden. Digital image. Wikimedia Commons. N.p., n.d. Web. 18 Apr. 2016. .media/Tule_Lake_Relocation_Center,_Newell,_California._Evacuee_flower_garden._-_NARA_-_539438.jpgplain2016-04-18T20:29:15-07:00Zarah Ferrarifce7cef03458dbb9b1eca281924074181a2de910