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Distributed for Reaktion Books

Corridors

Passages of Modernity

We spend our lives moving through passages, hallways, corridors, and gangways, yet these channeling spaces do not feature in architectural histories, monographs, or guidebooks. They are overlooked, undervalued, and unregarded, seen as unlovely parts of a building’s infrastructure rather than architecture.

This book is the first definitive history of the corridor, from its origins in country houses and utopian communities in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, through reformist Victorian prisons, hospitals, and asylums, to the “corridors of power,” bureaucratic labyrinths, and housing estates of the twentieth century. Taking in a wide range of sources, from architectural history to fiction, film, and TV, Corridors explores how the corridor went from a utopian ideal to a place of unease: the archetypal stuff of nightmares.

240 pages | 40 halftones | 6 3/4 x 8 3/4 | © 2019

Architecture: Architecture--Criticism


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Reviews

“One of the book’s strengths is Luckhurst’s appreciation that architectural spaces owe their emotional impact to context as much as to form: corridors may be sites of isolation and dread—he writes vividly about them as dystopian symbols of bureaucracy—but they can also be places for communication and encounter.”

Times Literary Supplement

“It is the most boring room in the house, or so you might think. Luckhurst, an academic who has previously written on horror and zombies, here considers the surprising history of what is often an architectural afterthought—and explains why so many terrible things happen in corridors in films. This is an illuminating book for readers intrigued by architecture’s forgotten history.”

Financial Times, “Best Interiors Books”

“[An] ambitious and consistently informative cultural history.”

London Review of Books

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