"Chris Smith's excellent new book traces the emergence, trajectory and projection of D&G's thought, explored in and through its connections to architectural theory and practice. We're brought quickly into this world, with its complexities and lineages, but this is no regular family history. Smith's writing is engaging and detailed, careful and speculative, and provides a significant addition to work on D&G." -- Stephen Walker, Professor of Architectural Humanities, University of Manchester, UK "A sharp and impactful book. This is creative engagement with Deleuze in the best sense. A handbook to inspire and spark the conceptual imagination of architects and art practitioners. It does this while sketching out aspects of a theoretical framework often able to convincingly explain what it is architects do." -- Guillaume Collett, Research Fellow, Centre for Critical Thought, University of Kent, UK "An illuminating look at the nascent field of experimental legal philosophy.
The research is ambitious, both theoretically and empirically, and wholly original. This is interdisciplinary at its best." -- Roseanna Sommers, Assistant Professor of Law, University of Michigan, USA "In this rich, rigorous, and original work, Chris Smith engages architecture's own multi-dimensionality to traverse the terrain for thinking, sensing, and making opened up by Deleuze and Guattari. The illuminations that result-Ruskin's edible stones mapping the authors' thoughts on transversality , for example--are at once marvelously concrete, revelatory--and profoundly generative." -- Lily Chi, Associate Professor of Architecture, Cornell University, USA.