generating the grammar of architecture henry glassie semiotica 7:4(1973), 324-333

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Generating the Grammar of Architecture Henry Glassie Semiotica 7:4(1973), 324- 333

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Figure 2: Southern Mountain Cabins of the Square Type. from Henry Glassie’s “The Types of the Southern Mountain Cabin” (1968, Pg. 352). Figure text includes locational information and date of recording. Plans include conventions for planked log walls, door and window jambs, and scale. Drawn from photographs. Example A. “V-notched cabin situated south of Fletcher, near Hood, Greene County, Virginia (July 1963).” Example B. “This cabin was built of balloon (light, sawed, nailed together) frame covered with vertical boards. When the shed was added to the chimney end both parts were covered with weatherboards. It is located between Crozet and Whitehall, Albemarle County, Virginia (August 1964).” Example C. “V-notched cabin with rear shed addition situated north of Boones Mill, Roanoke County, Virginia (August 1965).”

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Page 1: Generating the Grammar of Architecture Henry Glassie Semiotica 7:4(1973), 324-333

Generating the Grammar of Architecture

Henry GlassieSemiotica 7:4(1973), 324-333

Page 2: Generating the Grammar of Architecture Henry Glassie Semiotica 7:4(1973), 324-333

Henry GlassieB.A. Tulane University in 1964M.A. Cooperstown Program (Oneonta) in 1965Ph.D. University of Pennsylvania in 1969Pattern in the Material Folk Culture of the

Eastern United States (1969)Folk Housing in Middle Virginia: A Structural analysis of Historic Artifacts (1975)All Silver and No Brass: An Irish Christmas Mumming (1975)Passing the Time in Ballymenone (1982)Irish Folktales (1985)The Spirit of Folk Art (1989)Turkish Traditional Art Today (1993)Art and Life in Bangladesh (1997)Material Culture (1999)The Potters Art (1999)Vernacular Architecture (2000)The Stars of Ballymenone (2006)Prince Twins Seven-Seven (2010)

Faculty PositionsIndiana University, BloomingtonUVa Summer ScholarsBrown UniversityUniversity of PennsylvaniaIndiana University Bloomington

Page 3: Generating the Grammar of Architecture Henry Glassie Semiotica 7:4(1973), 324-333

Figure 2: Southern Mountain Cabins of the Square Type. from Henry Glassie’s “The Types of the Southern Mountain Cabin” (1968, Pg. 352). Figure text includes locational information and date of recording. Plans include conventions for planked log walls, door and window jambs, and scale. Drawn from photographs. Example A. “V-notched cabin situated south of Fletcher, near Hood, Greene County, Virginia (July 1963).” Example B. “This cabin was built of balloon (light, sawed, nailed together) frame covered with vertical boards. When the shed was added to the chimney end both parts were covered with weatherboards. It is located between Crozet and Whitehall, Albemarle County, Virginia (August 1964).” Example C. “V-notched cabin with rear shed addition situated north of Boones Mill, Roanoke County, Virginia (August 1965).”

Page 4: Generating the Grammar of Architecture Henry Glassie Semiotica 7:4(1973), 324-333
Page 5: Generating the Grammar of Architecture Henry Glassie Semiotica 7:4(1973), 324-333

Figure 4: Type 4, House K. The Brooking house. from Henry Glassie’s Folk Housing in Middle Virginia (1975, pg. 81). Figure text includes locational information. Photographs are consistently used for elevations, plans include convention for gable orientation and window sash, but do not represent door jambs. “The central (eighteenth-century) part of this house is an example of a type 4 house.”

Page 6: Generating the Grammar of Architecture Henry Glassie Semiotica 7:4(1973), 324-333

Figure 5: Mrs Cutler’s House. from Henry Glassie’s Passing the Time in Ballymenone (1982, pg. 335). Photographs are used for elevations, plans include locations for chairs, tables and beds, indicating the occupation of space and location of activity.