Berlin. City Without Form - Philipp Oswalt
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Présentation Berlin. City Without Form de Philipp Oswalt Format Broché
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Résumé :
Berlin was shaped by the events of the twentieth century in a process of automatic urbanism. More than any other metropolis, the city absorbed the forces of that epoch?-?modernity, fascism, two world wars, Stalinism, socialism, the Cold?War, revolt, capitalism?-?and gave them form. This book shows how even today, opposed ideological, political, economic, and military forces continue to produce unplanned structures and activities and urban phenomena beyond the categories of urban design and architecture that conceal rich potential. Berlin reveals particularly clearly phenomena that have shaped urban development in the twentieth century in other places as well: conglomeration, collision of borders, ?destruction, void, mass, metabolism, and simulation. The present book, which caused a sensation when first published in German twenty years ago, is now being published in English for the first time. Its surprising and informative analysis of ?Berlin as a prototype of the modern city destroys the ideologies of heroic modernity as well as the new nationalisms and shows how the modern city as found can become the point of departure for new forms of context-specific architecture and urban planning. Taking Berlin as a prototype, Philipp Oswalt's lucid analysis describes how much the built environment of cities is influenced by the unintended side-effects of political, economic, and technological processes. This automatic urbanism reveals modernist master-planning and national building traditions as being a myth. Instead, the book offers a both socially and ecologically more sensitive, more responsible approach to develop cities as found. Saskia Sassen, Columbia University New York This English edition of Philipp Oswalt's now-classic study could not be more timely. Every effort to understand the modern city must contend with Berlin, the twentieth century's anti-capital. Its lessons, presented here with singular insight and authority, remain necessary to anyone thinking about what that word -?city?-?might still mean today. Reinhold Martin, Columbia University New York Berlin has never only been a theatre in the battle between ideas and ideologies. Rather, it has always been the material means by which these ideas clash against each other. If the struggle for our futures must take place in Berlin, as our historical moment seems to demand, there is no better guide than Philipp Oswalt's now classic Berlin: City Without Form. His scholarly ingenuity and perceptive architect's eye are only matched by a commitment to the future of his city. Eyal Weizman, Goldsmiths/University of London
Biographie:
Philipp Oswalt (born 1964) has been professor of architectural theory and design at the University of Kassel since 2006. He has had also been teaching at Harvard University, University St. Gallen and Berlin University of the Arts, among others. Other posts have included: 1996-1997 editor of architecture magazine Arch+, 1996-1997 employee at OMA/Rem Koolhaas, 2001-2003 codirector of research project Urban Catalyst, 2002-2008 director of Shrinking Cities project, 2009-2014 director of the Bauhaus Dessau Foundation.
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