Publisher's Synopsis
With contributions by more than forty of the most influential voices in art, architecture, and design, After the Bauhaus, Before the Internet traces a history of design teaching from the mid-1950s to the mid-1990s through essays, interviews, remembrances, and primary materials. Geoff Kaplan has gathered a multigenerational group of theorists and practitioners to explore what design thinking and interdisciplinarity mean for design and its pedagogy and how they can be placed within a conceptual and historical context. At a time when all our choices and behaviours are putatively curated, and when "design thinking" is recruited to solve problems from climate change to social media optimisation, this volume looks at how design's self-understandings as a discipline have changed and how they affect the ways it writes its own histories and theories.