Timothy Hyde is associate professor in the history and theory of architecture at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He is the author of Constitutional Modernism: Architecture and Civil Society in Cuba, 19331959. He lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Twitter @hyde_timothy
"As Hyde eloquently demonstrates in a compelling trajectory that
arcs from Stonehenge to modern London, ugliness is more than a
physical trait or quality assigned to an object. It has acted as a
site and catalyst for debate on broader social
circumstances."---Catherine Slessor, The Guardian
"This book is a welcome break from good taste. . . . If you have
ever wondered why a certain building seems ugly, this book will
help you understand why you feel that way."---Lucy Watson,
Financial Times
"Hyde’s book confronts ugliness head on, using it as a way to
interrogate British architectural discourse. . . . [His] research
on the individual case studies is impeccable."---Richard J.
Williams, Times Higher Education
"The great achievement of this book is to show that, even if the
language and opinions about taste change, debates about
architecture have always had some common features. They are never
just about buildings."---William Whyte, Church Times
"Discussions such as those effectively summarised in Ugliness and
Judgement are so instructive when we evaluate how to apply concepts
of beauty and ugliness in architectural debates."---Alexander
Adams, Salisbury Review
"A fascinating book. In taking as a point of departure the
limitations of aesthetics, Hyde invites readers to understand the
assessment of aesthetic failure as a wedge that pries open
conversations about inadequate, unresolved, or unsatisfying social
and legal arrangements. Ugliness, in his telling, points to gaps in
social, regulatory, urban, and institutional fabrics. The author
implies that the value of listening to complaints about buildings
lies in discerning the issues that encounters with 'ugly' buildings
bring to the fore."---Kathryn O’Rourke, Rice Design Alliance
"To call out ugliness, then, is a call to arms. While beauty basks
lazily and uselessly in its own perfection, ugliness spurs us into
action."---Igor Toronyi-Lalic, The Spectator
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