Norms, have long inhabited the architect’s toolset. Pertaining to the carpenter’s square or rule norma is first codified in the early nineteenth century as ‘standard, pattern, model’ as evidence of its common usage. Whereas the vernacular use of the noun ‘norm’ had to do with geometry, with ‘right angles’ and perpendicular lines, its adjectival derivation ‘normal’ is defined in 1828 in the Oxford English Dictionary as ‘constituting, conforming to, not deviating or differ from, the common type or standard.’ The emergence of the adjectival form of the noun is the first historical clue that suggests a symbolic shift that happened throughout the eighteenth century from the language of geometry to that of biological matter.
Ernst and Peter Neufert
Architects’ Data, 1936
full text in pdf
Wiley
Architectural Graphic Standards
Hoboken, 2000
Aldo Spoldi (Met Levi)
Studies of Teatro di Oklahoma: Whisky Quiz, 1976
Courtesy Galleria Antonio Battaglia
Mark Leckey
Fiorucci Made Me Hardcore, 1999
Sari Monik Augustin
Social semiotic analysis of normative body discourse in advertisement (A Study of Foucault’s Panopticism in WRP Diet Center TV Commercial: “Susan Bachtiar” Version)
Universitas Al Azhar Indonesia
Bruno Latour
How to Talk About the Body? The Normative Dimension of Science Studies
COME BACK TOMORROW FOR VOLUME II: ORM: THE MODEL BODY