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Tuesday, November 10, 2009, HI 155 (History Lounge)
(Refreshments to follow)
Professor Denzer's paper will examine three landmark cooperative housing projects initiated in California after World War II in order to probe the relationship between social values and design against a backdrop of institutional resistance.In addition to their shared pursuit of a cooperative financial structure, these projects generally shared a similar social makeup and a commitment to modern architecture, raising the possibility that they might be understood as part of a common movement (if not organized as such).The most progressive group on the issue of race sponsored the most innovative design, while the cooperatives that opted for political compromise exhibited (relatively) less radical forms of architecture, landscape design and community planning.
Assessment of Student Learning
Giving to the Department of History
Department of History
University of Wyoming
College of Arts & Sciences
Room 158 History Building
Dept. 3198
1000 E. University Ave.
Laramie, WY 82071
(307)766-5101/5102
e-mail: history@uwyo.edu