"Savage Mind to Savage Machine is a breathtakingly ambitious discussion of ‘savage thought’ in modern architecture and design-ambitious methodologically, in its move from reductive versions of contextualization towards an epistemology of interdisciplinary aporias, displacements, and contradictions; ambitious historiographically, in its reconstruction of modern architecture as conceptual and political project; and, perhaps most compellingly of all, ambitious in its enmeshment of methodology and historiography towards an entirely new reading of the relation of modern architecture to its supposedly ‘savage’ counterparts."-Andrew Herscher, University of Michigan"Well-illustrated and persuasively argued, the book mixes historiography and complex theoretical analysis, detecting subtle interplays between design and governance over a long durÉe. "-Journal of Design History