What to Do with Ruins?
Contemporary Uses of Ruination
Joan Ramon Resina editor Laura Menéndez Gorina editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Liverpool University Press
Publishing:28th Oct '25
£115.00
This title is due to be published on 28th October, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

The essays in this book explore the history of ruins in multiple cultures and periods. Authors study ways in which ruins can be appropriated, foregrounded and re-semanticized for political purposes. The links between the materiality of monuments and global processes of ruination are seldom explored, as is the historicity of rubble and its museumification. Ruins are predicated on the interplay between presence and absence; they remind us of caducity while conjuring up the spectrum of the completeness that would negate them. They can awaken the eeriness of the disintegrating modern city and serve as a metaphor for institutional decay. But they can also underpin proposals of restoration through salvage and reuse of the rubble.
“[This book] is a timely publication and it shows new perspectives and modes of how to approach [this] complex topic.” - Zoltán Somhegyi – Associate Professor of Art history, Department of Philosophy, University of Szeged, Hungary
“[This book] is a fascinating collection of contributions that complement each other so that readers can easily follow the transversal themes raised by the editors.” – Professor Till Förster, University of Basel
ISBN: 9781836245384
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
240 pages