The Hidden DimensionPeople like to keep certain distances between themselves and other people or thigns. And this invisible bubble of space that constitutes each person's "territory" is one of the key dimensions of modern society. Edward T. Hall, author of The Silent Language, introduced the science of proxemics to demonstrate how man's use of space can affect personal and business reltions, cross-cultural interactions, architecture, city planning, and urban renewal. "One of the few extraordinary books about mankind's future which should be read by every thoughtful person." —Chicago Tribune "This is a book of impressive genius, replete with unusually sharp observations." —Richard J. Neutra, Landscape Architecture |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 42
Page 1
... languages , were confronted with the radically dif- ferent languages of the American Indians and the Eskimos . The con- flict between these two different language systems produced a revolu- tion concerning the nature of language itself ...
... languages , were confronted with the radically dif- ferent languages of the American Indians and the Eskimos . The con- flict between these two different language systems produced a revolu- tion concerning the nature of language itself ...
Page 2
... language he speaks , just as a computer is programmed . Like the computer , man's mind will register and structure external reality only in accordance with the program . Since two languages often program the same class of events quite ...
... language he speaks , just as a computer is programmed . Like the computer , man's mind will register and structure external reality only in accordance with the program . Since two languages often program the same class of events quite ...
Page 85
... language and culture . He did this in the most simple and obvious way , by analyzing the lexicon of two languages ... language to culture - and they have come to use language data with great sophistication . Lexical analyses are usually ...
... language and culture . He did this in the most simple and obvious way , by analyzing the lexicon of two languages ... language to culture - and they have come to use language data with great sophistication . Lexical analyses are usually ...
Contents
CULTURE AS COMMUNICATION | 1 |
The Dieoff on James Island | 17 |
Tactile Space | 57 |
Copyright | |
13 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
activities Adelbert Ames adrenal aerial perspective American animals apparently Arab architect architecture artist automobile awareness basic behavior body building Chapter cities close communication crowding density developed different cultures door effect enclave English environment ethologists European experience face fact feel feet fovea French function German heat Hopi human important inside interaction intruded involved Japanese kinesthetic language learned living look male man's Marina City ment move Negro normal objects observed olfaction olfactory organisms outdoors paintings perceived perception perceptual world peripheral vision personal distance perspective Philippe Ariès polychronic population population density possible Press proxemic patterns psychologists rats receptors relationship screen seen sense sensory sensory deprivation shift sink skin smell social distance spatial stress structure subjects talk territory texture things tion touch urban urban renewal viewer vision visual field visual world voice York zones