

Carlotta Daro, "The Architecture of the Wire: Infrastructures of Telecommunication" (MIT Press, 2025)
Oct 5, 2025
Carlotta Darò, an art and architectural historian, dives into her book exploring telecommunications infrastructure and its profound influence on urban culture. She discusses the evolution of technical “things” like telephone booths and cables, intertwining history with aesthetic insights. Darò highlights the diverse contributors—engineers, architects, and users—shaping this narrative. She also touches on innovative telephone-driven artworks and shares her ongoing research at ETH Zurich, focusing on architectural acoustics and immersive experiences.
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Genesis In A Postdoc Fellowship
- Carlotta Darò traced the book's origin to her postdoc at McGill and immersion in sound studies around Jonathan Sterne.
- She used a Mellon fellowship to dive into AT&T and Bell Labs archives and gathered rich visual material that shaped the project.
Simplify Through Thematic Focus
- Focus rather than exhaust when tackling vast historical topics; choose clear organizing principles.
- Use thematic keywords to cross-cut sources and make a complex story manageable.
Keyword Structure Links Scales
- Darò structured the book around keywords like matter, aesthetics, technique, imaginary, wireless, law, planning, public, booth, and ubiquity.
- This keyword approach links technical, cultural, and spatial scales to show reciprocity between imagination and infrastructure.