ABSTRACT
This book has been in my thoughts for many years. Growing up in the south-west
of England, contemporary mythologies presented the landscape as largely docile,
bucolic and benign. Writing at the cusp of the twentieth century, Thomas Hardy’s
fictional Wessex offered an alternative and more convincing rural tradition in which
the weather was a complex protagonist in events. But Hardy’s novels differ from
Weather Architecture in that they fatalistically focus on weather’s influence on
people, while this book is concerned with the interdependence of nature and culture
and considers urban as well as rural life.1 To oil the wheel of polite conversation,
the English mention the weather incessantly. But here, as in many countries and
continents, the weather, as a phenomenon and a metaphor, is also a means to
explore and engage the relations between nature and culture, time and space, and
life and death.