New Views on R. Buckminster Fuller
This Stanford collection frames Fuller through the archive itself — how the papers were acquired, how they are organized, and how they support new critical readings of his work — treating the archive as a major Fuller construction.
Core structure
- Preface on the Stanford archive and its acquisition
- Introduction on Fuller as a cosmic experiment
- Paper Mausoleum: the archive as subject
- Essays on 1927, utopianism, design, energy, aesthetics, politics, and futures
- Notes and index
Main ideas
- Fuller's archive is not just evidence; it is part of his legacy.
- The papers support new readings beyond heroic biography or dismissal.
- Fuller's designs are best understood in relation to broader historical and social contexts.
- The archive documents the interplay of performance, invention, and public persona.
- Different essays test different "views" of Fuller across disciplines.
Why it matters
This is the key archival and historiographic book in the corpus. It explains why Fuller still needs to be reread through documents, context, and cross-disciplinary scholarship rather than legend alone.
See Also
- The Experimenters (The Experimenters) — related scholarly framing of Fuller and his milieu
Sources
- new_views_on_r_buckminster_fuller/ — book project directory (repo-local source tree)
- new_views_on_r_buckminster_fuller/index.md — synthesis index for the source project