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functionalism
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Functionalism

In architecture and design, the principle of excluding everything that serves no practical purpose. Central to 20th-century modernism, the Functionalist ethic developed as a reaction against the 19th-century practice of imitating and combining earlier styles. Its finest achievements are in the realms of industrial architecture and office furnishings.

Leading exponents of Functionalism were the German Bauhaus school, the Dutch group De Stijl, and the Scandinavians, especially the Swedish and Finnish designers. Prominent architects in the field were Le Corbusier and Walter Gropius.

functionalism

In the social sciences, the view of society as a system made up of a number of interrelated parts, all interacting on the basis of a common value system or consensus about basic values and common goals. Every social custom and institution is seen as having a function in ensuring that society works efficiently; deviance and crime are seen as forms of social sickness.

Functionalists often describe society as an organism with a life of its own, above and beyond the sum of its members. The French sociologists Auguste Comte and Emile Durkheim and the American Talcott Parsons assumed functionalist approaches for their studies.



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While confidently asserted, controlled and deliberate in terms of tectonic presence, the lightness of touch achieved is much more than a functionalist attitude to materials and building, or indeed a direct homage to the architect's mentor, Glenn Murcutt.
This integration of interior and exterior space, urban fabric and represented city views, and the various speeds at which the city is perceived find an additional mirroring, but also a stopping point, in the four ink-jet prints of the series "Urban Creatures": Looking at these functionalist modern buildings, photographed between 1995 and 2005 in Creteil (France), Mexico City, Beijing, and Chicago, one cannot tell where they might be located.
Lang is critical of such functionalist analyses and anthropological approaches that portray Arab society as lacking organizing institutions and that suggest that feud functions as social ordering.
 
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