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The Mobile Ruin

The Everyday Life of the Berlin Wall

Blake Fitzpatrick author Vid Ingelevics author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:McGill-Queen's University Press

Publishing:14th Apr '26

£29.99

This title is due to be published on 14th April, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

The Mobile Ruin cover

How do we understand the afterlife of a historical icon – that once impenetrable border now in motion, gifted and sold around the world?

Contributing to understandings of material history, public commemoration, border politics, and documentary studies, this compelling visual work envisions the atomized and displaced remnants of the Berlin Wall as a mobile ruin with an evolving history.

The Berlin Wall divided the city for almost three decades before it fell on 9 November 1989. This symbol of the Cold War has been travelling longer than it stood still. An object that once seemed immovable now wanders around the world in every format from two-tonne slabs to pocket-sized souvenirs.

This collection envisions the atomized and displaced remnants of the Berlin Wall as a mobile ruin with an evolving history. Blake Fitzpatrick and Vid Ingelevics's photographic investigation of the geographical dispersement of its fragments is a form of witness to the history of the wall after it fell. Featuring over one hundred photographs, intercut with powerful contextual writings by artists, scholars, and curators (including people involved in souvenir production and sale), this unique work raises compelling questions about the shifting meaning of Berlin Wall artifacts – essentially banal pieces of concrete – in light of their physical relocation and shifts in geopolitical power.

Contributing to our understanding of material history, public commemoration, border politics, and documentary studies, The Mobile Ruin explores the ongoing resonance of the wall and the new life it takes on in a series of unexpected international locations.

ISBN: 9780228026860

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

224 pages