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  • Chantal Pontbriand (Ed.)

    Per/Form. How to Do Things with[out] Words

  • Berit Fischer (Ed.)

    Hlysnan.The Notion and Politics of Listening

  • Drei Farben House

    Choice Item

  • Carola Dertnig, Diedrich Diederichsen,…

    Troubling Research. Performing Knowledge in the Arts

  • Filip Dujardin

    Fictions

  • Steven Cleeren

    Hugo Puttaert. Think in Colour: Visionandfactory

  • Kevin Bone

    Lessons from Modernism. Environmental Design Strategies in…

  • Maurizio Lazzarato

    Signs and Machines. Capitalism and the Production of…

  • Ueli Mäder

    Raum und Macht. Die Stadt zwischen Vision und Wirklichkeit…

  • Gabriel Orozco, Lily Luahana Cole

    Impossible Utopias

  • Kay von Keitz, Sabine Voggenreiter (Hg.)

    Architektur im Kontext. Architecture in Context

  • Michelle Cotton (Ed.)

    Aleksandra Domanovic. From yu to me

  • Selena Savic, Gordan Savicic (Ed.)

    Unpleasant Design

  • Justin McGuirk

    Radical Cities. Across Latin America in Search of a New…

  • Armen Avanessian, Robin Mackay (Ed.)

    #Accelerate: The Accelerationist Reader

  • Lukasz Stanek (Ed.)

    Team 10 East. Revisionist Architecture in Real Existing…

  • Tom Avermaete, Maristella Casciato

    Casablanca Chandigarh. A Report on Modernization

  • Max Jacobson, Shelley Brock

    Invitation to Architecture. Discovering Delight in the…

  • Stephen Cairns, Jane M. Jacobs

    Buildings Must Die. A Perverse View of Architecture

  • Kim Jong-il

    Kim Jong-il. De l'Architecture. Morceaux choisis. B2-…

  • Jay Swayze

    Le Meilleur des (deux) Mondes. Maisons et Jardins…

  • Styliane Philippou

    Modernisme et Vanité. Happy Days à Miami et la Havane. B2-…

  • Olaf Nicolai

    Szondi/Eden

  • Philipp Oswalt (Hg.)

    Dessau 1945. Moderne zerstört: Bauhaus Edition 45

  • Robert Maxwell

    Ancient Wisdom and Modern Knowhow. Learning to Live with…

  • David Campany (Ed.)

    Walker Evans. The Magazine Work

  • Marc Angelil, Rainer Hehl (Eds.)

    Empower! Essays on the Political Economy of Urban Form. Vol…

  • Sandu Publishing (Ed.)

    Collective Housing

  • Tom Wilkinson

    Bricks & Mortals. Ten Great Buildings and the People…

  • Stefan Römer

    Inter-esse

  • Architektur in Gebrauch

    AG1 – Great Arthur House, AG2 – Falkenhorst, AG3 –…

  • Anke Fesel, Chris Keller (Ed.)

    Berlin Wonderland. Wild Years Revisited, 1990–1996

  • Agata Pyzik

    Poor but Sexy. Culture Clashes in Europe East and West

  • Tom Holert

    Übergriffe. Zustände und Zuständigkeiten der…

  • Chantal Mouffe

    Agonistik. Die Welt politisch denken

  • Nicola Louise Markhus and Marte…

    Another Space: Textile Spaces

  • Heike Gfrereis, Johannes Kempf (Hg.)

    Reisen. Fotos von unterwegs

  • Little Global Cities

    Sarajevo

  • Lilli Kuschel

    Cool World

  • Judith Collins

    Sculpture Today

  • Natalie Czech

    I can not repeat what I hear

  • Stefan Banz

    Jeff Wall. Mit dem Auge des Geistes

  • Florian Pfeffer

    To Do. Die neue Rolle der Gestaltung in einer veränderten…

  • Ernesto Laclau

    The Rhetorical Foundations of Society

  • Miki Hirabayashi

    Cute Farm Animals

  • Daniel Albright

    Panaesthetics. On the Unity and Diversity of the Arts

  • Carola Dertnig, Felicitas Thun-…

    Performing the Sentence. Research and Teaching in…

  • Shundana Yusaf

    Broadcasting Buildings. Architecture on the Wireless, 1927-…

  • Bettina Knaup, Beatrice Ellen (Ed.)

    re.act.feminism. A Performing Archive

  • Andrew Dent, Leslie Sherr

    Material Innovation. Architecture

  • Yasmin Merican

    The Right to Brand

  • Pinar Yoldas

    An Ecosystem of Excess

  • Matthew Gandy, BJ Nilsen (Eds.)

    The Acoustic City

  • Quinn Latimer (Hg.)

    Akram Zaatari. Film as a Form of Writing

  • Steirischer Herbst, Florian Malzacher (…

    Truth Is Concrete. A Handbook for Artistic Strategies in…

  • Jan Svankmajer

    Touching and Imagining. An Introduction to Tactile Art

  • Marc Glöde

    Farbige Lichträume. Manifestationen einer Veränderung des…

  • Olaf Habelmann

    Die Trauben auf deinem Bauch bilden ein Muster

  • Nick Aikens (Ed.)

    Too Much World. The Films of Hito Steyerl

  • L.I.E. (Library of Independent Exchange)

    L.I.E. Lists of Ten Books

  • Malcolm Miles

    Eco-Aesthetics. Art, Literature and Architecture in a…

  • Nikolaus Hirsch, Markus Miessen (Ed.)

    Subtraction. Keller Easterling. Critical Spatial Practice 4

  • Tom Steinert

    Komplexe Wahrnehmung und moderner Städtebau. Paul Hofer,…

  • Christine Ross

    The Past is the Present; It's the Future Too

  • Rachel Mader (Hg.)

    Radikal ambivalent. Engagement und Verantwortung in den…

  • Katharina Roters

    Hungarian Cubes. Subversive Ornamente im Sozialismus

  • John Paul Ricco

    The Decision Between Us. Art and Ethics in the Time of…

  • Ugo Mulas

    Cirque Calder

  • Adrian von Buttlar, Kerstin Wittmann-…

    Baukunst der Nachkriegsmoderne. Architekturführer Berlin…

  • Laura Bruns

    Stadt Selber Machen. Ein Handbuch

  • Michael Fried

    Warum Photographie als Kunst so bedeutend ist wie nie zuvor

  • Henri Lefèbvre

    Die Revolution der Städte. La Revolution urbaine

  • Martin Pawley

    Theorie und Gestaltung im Zweiten Maschinenzeitalter

  • Roberto Gargiani, Anna Rosellini

    Le Corbusier. Béton Brut und der unbeschreibliche Raum (…

  • Hannah Feldman

    From a Nation Torn. Decolonizing Art and Representation in…

  • Conditional Design Team

    Conditional Design Workbook

  • HomeShop (Ed.)

    Appendix

  • Marketa Uhlirova (Ed.)

    Birds of Paradise. Costume as Cinematic Spectacle

  • Stasis. Academic Journal

    Social and Political Theory. No. 1

  • Pavlos Lefas

    Architecture. A Historical Perspective

  • Thomas Girst

    The Duchamp Dictionary

  • Christopher Dell

    Das Urbane. Wohnen. Leben. Produzieren

  • Cathrine Veikos

    Lina Bo Bardi. The Theory of Architectural Practice

  • Gustau Galfetti Gili

    My House, My Paradise. The Construction of the Ideal…

  • Dieter Rams

    Less but better. Weniger, aber besser

  • Matt Zoller Seitz

    The Wes Anderson Collection

  • Louis Martin (Ed.)

    On Architecture. Melvin Charney, a Critical Anthology

  • Adaptive Actions

    Heteropolis

  • Thomas Durisch (Hg.)

    Peter Zumthor. 1985–2013

  • Martin Conrads

    Ohne Mich

  • Gertrud Vogler

    La Défense. Métro, boulot, dodo

  • James Nisbet

    Ecologies, Environments, and Energy Systems in Art of the…

  • October Files 16

    John Knight

  • Stadt Zürich, Amt für Hochbauten (Hg.)

    Grundrissfibel. 50 Wettbewerbe im gemeinnützigen…

  • Paolo Belardi

    Why Architects Still Draw

  • Forensic Architecture (Ed.)

    Forensis. The Architecture of Public Truth

  • Liesbeth Huybrechts (Ed.)

    Participation Is Risky. Approaches to Joint Creative…

  • Clog 10

    Prisons

Gone Tomorrow. The Hidden Life of Garbage

Eat a take-out meal, buy a pair of shoes, or read a newspaper, and you’re soon faced with a bewildering amount of garbage. The United States is the planet’s number-one producer of trash. Each American throws out 4.5 pounds daily. But garbage is also a global problem; the Pacific Ocean is today six times more abundant with plastic waste than zooplankton. How did we end up with this much rubbish, and where does it all go? Journalist and filmmaker Heather Rogers answers these questions by taking readers on a grisly, oddly fascinating tour through the underworld of garbage.
Said to “read like a thriller” (Library Journal), Gone Tomorrow excavates the history of rubbish handling from the 1800s to the present, pinpointing the roots of today’s waste-addicted society. With a “lively authorial voice” (New York Press), Rogers draws connections between modern industrial production, consumer culture, and our throwaway lifestyle. She also investigates controversial topics like the politics of recycling and the export of trash to poor countries, while offering a potent argument for change.
America leads the world in garbage, and that is nothing to be proud of. A clear-thinking and peppery writer, Rogers presents a galvanizing expose of how we became the planet's trash monsters. Americans were ingeniously thrifty until industrialization ushered in consumer culture and the age of disposable goods and built-in obsolescence. But once the public was exhorted to buy stuff whether they needed it or not--and Rogers provides many eye-opening examples of corporate strategies and propaganda - new forms of garbage began to pile up and break down into toxic substances. Rogers details everything that is wrong with today's wasteful packaging, bogus recycling, and flawed landfills and incinerators. Here, too, is the inside story of the plastic revolution and the irresponsibly wasteful beverage market, the Mafia's involvement in commercial waste, and the illegal overseas shipping of garbage, especially toxic e-waste - trashed computers and cell phones. Rogers exhibits black-belt precision in her assault on American corporations that succeed in "greenwashing" the public while remaining "hell-bent on ever-expanding production no matter what the ecological toll."


Heather Rogers
Gone Tomorrow. The Hidden Life of Garbage
New Press , 2006, 978-1565848795