Adhocism, expanded and updated edition The Case for Improvisation

Adhocism, expanded and updated edition The Case for Improvisation by Charles Jencks is published by MIT Press and was released on May 24, 2013. This edition revisits the original 1972 text, which introduced the concept of “adhocism” as a design principle that encourages improvisation and resourcefulness in various fields, including architecture and everyday problem-solving. The book reflects on how this approach has evolved over the past four decades, emphasizing a shift away from rigid modernist doctrines towards more flexible, creative solutions.
Readers will find a rich exploration of how adhocism manifests in everyday life, from simple improvisations to broader applications in city planning and political movements. The expanded edition includes new texts and illustrations that highlight the ongoing relevance of this concept, showcasing examples from diverse areas such as auto mechanics and biology. Engagingly written, Adhocism invites readers to reconsider traditional methods and embrace a more adaptive, trial-and-error approach to challenges. With 248 pages of content, this edition serves as both a historical reflection and a contemporary guide to innovative thinking.
Official synopsis Publisher
The triumphant return of a book that gave us permission to throw out the rulebook, in activities ranging from play to architecture to revolution.
When this book first appeared in 1972, it was part of the spirit that would define a new architecture and design era—a new way of thinking ready to move beyond the purist doctrines and formal models of modernism. Charles Jencks and Nathan Silver’s book was a manifesto for a generation that took pleasure in doing things ad hoc, using materials at hand to solve real-world problems. The implications were subversive. Turned-off citizens of the 1970s immediately adopted the book as a DIY guide. The word “adhocism” entered the vocabulary, the concept of adhocism became part of the designer’s toolkit, and Adhocism became a cult classic. Now Adhocism is available again, with new texts by Jencks and Silver reflecting on the past forty years of adhocism and new illustrations demonstrating adhocism’s continuing relevance.
Adhocism has always been around. (Think Robinson Crusoe, making a raft and then a shelter from the wreck of his ship.) As a design principle, adhocism starts with everyday improvisations: a bottle as a candleholder, a dictionary as a doorstop, a tractor seat on wheels as a dining room chair. But it is also an undeveloped force within the way we approach almost every activity, from play to architecture to city planning to political revolution.
Engagingly written, filled with pictures and examples from areas as diverse as auto mechanics and biology, Adhocism urges us to pay less attention to the rulebook and more to the real principle of how we actually do things. It declares that problems are not necessarily solved in a genius’s “eureka!” moment but by trial and error, adjustment and readjustment.
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