Description

Book Synopsis

More than two decades of deconstruction, renovation, and reconstruction have left the urban environments in the former German Democratic Republic completely transformed. This volume considers the changing urban landscapes in the former East — and how the filling of previous absences and the absence of previous presence — creates the cultural landscape of modern unified Germany. This broadens our understanding of this transformation by examining often-neglected cities, spaces, or structures, and historical narration and preservation.



Trade Review

“The volume provides its audience with enormously helpful insights in the question of how the transformation processes after the Wende affect different layers of the city and how these transformations can be interpreted from a variety of academic fields.” · Urban Studies Journal

“The essays in this collection resolutely de-center Berlin as a privileged subject of cultural studies, reconstructing the social histories, architectural rebuilding efforts, and other issues marking the transition from the former GDR to postunification in Dresden, Erfurt, Hoyerswerda, Frankfurt (Oder), and elsewhere… Fascinating and insightful.” · Rolf J. Goebel, from the Afterword

“I think the premise of the collection is a promising one, to shift focus from the Berlin-centric approaches to the relationship between the past and urban space, towards the areas of Eastern Germany that are frequently overlooked… the book forms a useful complement to other studies of the cityscape in the post-unification period.” · Simon Ward, University of Aberdeen



Table of Contents

List of Illustrations
Acknowledgements

Introduction
Gwyneth Cliver and Carrie Smith-Prei

PART I: GROUNDWORK

Chapter 1. Preserving the Past Before and After the Wende: A Case Study of Quedlinburg
Heike Alberts

Chapter 2. No Man’s Land: Fiction and Reality in Buddy Giovinazzo’s Potsdamer Platz
Christopher Jones

PART II: PROJECTIONS

Chapter 3. Cinematic Reflections of Germany’s Postunification Woes: Architecture and Urban Space of Frankfurt (Oder) in Halbe Treppe, Lichter, and Kombat Sechzehn
Sebastian Heiduschke

Chapter 4. Reclaiming the Thuringian Tuscany: The Touristic Appeal of Bad Sulza and its Toskana Therme
Erika Nelson

Chapter 5. Berlin through the Lens: Space and (National) Identity in the Postunification Capital
Susanna Miller, Jennifer Ruth Hosek, Tamara Nadolny, Heidi Manicke, Flavia Zaka, Trevor Blakeney, and Jude Hirman

Chapter 6. The Amputated City: The Voids of Hoyerswerda
Gwyneth Cliver

PART III: THEORIES

Chapter 7. Sounding out Erfurt: Does the Song Remain the Same?
Heiner Stahl

Chapter 8. Restoration and Redemption: Defending Kultur and Heimat in Eisenach’s Cityscape
Jason James

Chapter 9. The Bauwerk in the Age of its Technical Reproducibility: Historical Reconstruction, Pious Modernism, and Dresden’s “süße Krankheit”
Rob McFarland with Elizabeth Guthrie

Afterword
Rolf J. Goebel

Notes on Contributors
Index

Bloom and Bust: Urban Landscapes in the East

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    A Hardback by Gwyneth Cliver, Carrie Smith-Prei

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      Publisher: Berghahn Books
      Publication Date: 01/11/2014
      ISBN13: 9781782384908, 978-1782384908
      ISBN10: 1782384901

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      More than two decades of deconstruction, renovation, and reconstruction have left the urban environments in the former German Democratic Republic completely transformed. This volume considers the changing urban landscapes in the former East — and how the filling of previous absences and the absence of previous presence — creates the cultural landscape of modern unified Germany. This broadens our understanding of this transformation by examining often-neglected cities, spaces, or structures, and historical narration and preservation.



      Trade Review

      “The volume provides its audience with enormously helpful insights in the question of how the transformation processes after the Wende affect different layers of the city and how these transformations can be interpreted from a variety of academic fields.” · Urban Studies Journal

      “The essays in this collection resolutely de-center Berlin as a privileged subject of cultural studies, reconstructing the social histories, architectural rebuilding efforts, and other issues marking the transition from the former GDR to postunification in Dresden, Erfurt, Hoyerswerda, Frankfurt (Oder), and elsewhere… Fascinating and insightful.” · Rolf J. Goebel, from the Afterword

      “I think the premise of the collection is a promising one, to shift focus from the Berlin-centric approaches to the relationship between the past and urban space, towards the areas of Eastern Germany that are frequently overlooked… the book forms a useful complement to other studies of the cityscape in the post-unification period.” · Simon Ward, University of Aberdeen



      Table of Contents

      List of Illustrations
      Acknowledgements

      Introduction
      Gwyneth Cliver and Carrie Smith-Prei

      PART I: GROUNDWORK

      Chapter 1. Preserving the Past Before and After the Wende: A Case Study of Quedlinburg
      Heike Alberts

      Chapter 2. No Man’s Land: Fiction and Reality in Buddy Giovinazzo’s Potsdamer Platz
      Christopher Jones

      PART II: PROJECTIONS

      Chapter 3. Cinematic Reflections of Germany’s Postunification Woes: Architecture and Urban Space of Frankfurt (Oder) in Halbe Treppe, Lichter, and Kombat Sechzehn
      Sebastian Heiduschke

      Chapter 4. Reclaiming the Thuringian Tuscany: The Touristic Appeal of Bad Sulza and its Toskana Therme
      Erika Nelson

      Chapter 5. Berlin through the Lens: Space and (National) Identity in the Postunification Capital
      Susanna Miller, Jennifer Ruth Hosek, Tamara Nadolny, Heidi Manicke, Flavia Zaka, Trevor Blakeney, and Jude Hirman

      Chapter 6. The Amputated City: The Voids of Hoyerswerda
      Gwyneth Cliver

      PART III: THEORIES

      Chapter 7. Sounding out Erfurt: Does the Song Remain the Same?
      Heiner Stahl

      Chapter 8. Restoration and Redemption: Defending Kultur and Heimat in Eisenach’s Cityscape
      Jason James

      Chapter 9. The Bauwerk in the Age of its Technical Reproducibility: Historical Reconstruction, Pious Modernism, and Dresden’s “süße Krankheit”
      Rob McFarland with Elizabeth Guthrie

      Afterword
      Rolf J. Goebel

      Notes on Contributors
      Index

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