The Architecture of Happiness

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Architecture of Happiness
The Architecture of Happiness cover.jpg
AuthorAlain De Botton
CountryUnited States of America
LanguageEnglish
SubjectArchitecture, philosophy, Architectural Psychology, Aesthetics
PublisherVintage Books
Publication date
2006
Media typePrint (Hardcover & paperback)
Pages280 pp.
ISBN978-0241142486

The Architecture of Happiness is a book by Alain de Botton (ISBN 978-0241142486) which discusses the importance of beauty, published by Pantheon Books in 2006. De Botton, inspired by Stendhal's motto "beauty is the promise of happiness," analyzes human surroundings and how human needs and desires manifest their ideals in architecture.

Reception[]

The book attracted favourable attention from architects and architectural critics. In the Boston Globe, the architectural critic Robert Campbell declared it the "best introduction to architecture" that he had ever read.[1] There was favorable comment from UK, US and Australian critics.[2] The book featured prominently in the film 500 Days of Summer, where it was the reading matter of choice for the protagonist. In recognition of his services to architecture with the book, the RIBA made Alain de Botton an honorary fellow of the Institute in February 2010.[citation needed]

Not all reviews have been positive. Reviewing the book, New York Times reviewer Jim Holt, wrote "like de Botton’s previous books, ... contains its quota of piffle dressed up in pompous language," saying that de Botton's over-sensitivity to his surroundings even becomes humorous "in a Woody Allen-ish sort of way."[3] Another reviewer, Mark Lamster in I.D. Magazine wrote, "[De Botton] has produced a meandering, pompous disquisition that betrays an autodidact’s haphazard sense of the field, but with little of the original thinking that might be expected from an outsider. ... The Architecture of Happiness would be an innocuous castoff if not for its proselytizing ambitions (it has so far spawned a PBS miniseries) and a set of rather insidious ideas camouflaged in its twee prose."[4]

Cinematization[]

A television series, The Perfect Home, commissioned for Channel 4 and which first aired in 2006, was based on the book.

References[]

  1. ^ Robert Campbell (14 January 2007). "The Architecture of Happiness: Review". Boston Globe. Retrieved 24 February 2015.
  2. ^ Author's page Archived 2009-10-07 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Jim Holt (2006-12-10). "Dream Houses". New York Times. Retrieved 2008-04-06.
  4. ^ I.D. Magazine (January / February 2007)


Retrieved from ""