Practicing Citations

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Boyd was an influential architect, communicator and public educator having published nine books in which he mostly documented the architectural and cultural tastes of the time.[1]

Philip Goad is an Australian academic, currently serving as Professor of Architecture in the Faculty of Architecture, Building and Planning at the University of Melbourne. [2]

Neil Clerehan was a prominent Australian architect and architectural writer who wrote in the private press for more than 60 years, and ran a private consultancy. [3]

The work discusses various interpretations of Boyd's ideas, with the first part of the book drawing extensively on Heideggerian philosophy. [4]

Edited by Dr Karen Burns (Melbourne School of Design, University of Melbourne) and Prof Harriet Edquist (RMIT Design Archives), it brings together some of Australia’s leading architectural historians to discuss Boyd’s impact as a public intellectual, writer and media performer.[5]

Answers to Module 7 Questions

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Featherston's
  • Describe your media: A photograph
  • Is it your own work (Links to an external site.)? No, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Featherston%27s.JPG.
  • What is the file format (Links to an external site.)? jpg
  • What license (Links to an external site.) have you chosen? This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.
  • What category/gallery (Links to an external site.) will you add it to? Legacy
  • How will you describe (Links to an external site.) the file? Featherston

Reference list

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  1. ^ The Boyer Lectures - Artificial Australia by Robin Boyd : Australian Broadcasting Commission : Ambassador Press 22403
  2. ^ Philip Goad (2015) Bringing It All Home, Fabrications, 25:2, 176-213, DOI: 10.1080/10331867.2015.1046412
  3. ^ Neil Clerehan, 'Boyd, Robin Gerard (1919–1971)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, https://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/boyd-robin-gerard-9560/text16841, published first in hard copy 1993, accessed online 3 December 2021
  4. ^ Baracco, M., & Wright, L. (2017). Robin boyd : Spatial continuity. Taylor & Francis Group
  5. ^ RMIT Design Archives Journal, Vol 9 No 2, 2019, Robin Boyd Redux