This third edition of An Introduction to Design and Culture has been revised and updated throughout to include issues of globalization, sustainability and digital/interactive design. New for this edition is a chapter which covers key changes in design culture. Design culture has changed dramatically in the 21st century, the designer-hero is now much less in evidence and design has become much more interdisciplinary. Drawing on a wealth of mass-produced artefacts, images and environments including sewing machines, cars, televisions, clothes, electronic and branded goods and exhibitions, author Penny Sparke shows how design has helped to shape and reflect our social and cultural development. This introduction to the development of modern (and postmodern) design is ideal for undergraduate students.
Penelope Anne Sparke is a writer and academic who specializes in the history of design. She is a Professor of Design History at Kingston University, London, where she is also Director of the Modern Interiors Research Centre.
Sparke received her B.A. in French Literature and her P.G.C.E. in Education from Sussex University, and her Ph.D. in Design History from Brighton Polytechnic.
Very good research, but poorly executed. However, I would recomment it to anyone who's interested in the way design has influenced our everyday lives. But beware, the writing style makes it quite difficult to go through.
In this brief but powerful read, Penny Sparke expertly outlines the major influences and stakeholders in the world of 20th century design. The book contains a rather exhaustive list of resources for further investigation, which is good for a scholar but perhaps boring for the lay reader. Sparke is doubtless a bookshelf name for anyone attempting to understand how design arrived at its present context.