Berlin: A City Awaits
The Interplay between Political Ideology, Architecture and Identity
Neil Mair author Quazi Mahtab Zaman author
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Springer Nature Switzerland AG
Published:20th Oct '20
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Political meaning in architecture has been a subject of interest to many critics and writers. The most notable of these include Charles T. Goodsell and Kenneth Frampton. In Goodsell's (1988) statement “Political places are not randomly or casually brought into existence” (ibid, p. 8), the stipulation is that architecture has been used very deliberately in the past to bolster connotations of power and strength in cities representative of larger nations and political movements. The question central to this book relates to how this can be achieved. Goodsell argues that any study of the interplay between political ideology, architecture, and identity, demands a place imbued with political ideas opposed to “cold concepts and lifeless abstractions” (Goodsell 1988, p. 1). As a means through which to examine and evaluate the ways in which the development of cities can be influenced by political and ideological tendencies, this book focuses on Berlin, as a political discourse, given its significant destruction and reorganisation to reinstate its identity in the context of geopolitics and the advent of globalisation.
ISBN: 9783030514488
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
76 pages
1st ed. 2020