Following up his best selling books Degenerate Moderns and Dionysos Rising, E. Michael Jones completes the trilogy as he reveals in this book how modern architecture arose out of the disordered moral lives of its creators. Beginning with the simultaneous collapse of both his marriage and the Austro-Hungarian empire, Walter Gropius formulated an architectural rhetoric that would speak to the needs of the newly emerging modern man. As a sexually liberated social monad, modern man would have no need for home or family, no need to be rooted in a particular time or place. He was to live henceforth in the "international style." Soon that deeply materialistic, sterile architectural vision would conquer the world. From the suburbs of Moscow to the south side of Chicago, the new man would live in machines, "living machines", to use Gropius' words. Jones' book is an explanation of where that vision came from, where it led, and why it failed. Illustrated.
E. Michael Jones Libri
4 maggio 1948
E. Michael Jones è un controverso scrittore cattolico ed ex professore. Il suo lavoro spesso si impegna in una critica pungente dell'ebraismo. Lo stile provocatorio e i temi stimolanti di Jones attraggono i lettori interessati a prospettive non convenzionali sulla religione e sulla cultura.


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