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Buried City, Unearthing Teufelsberg: Berlin and its Geography of Forgetting [Hardback]

(Designer, architectural theorist and public artist, UK)
  • Formāts: Hardback, 194 pages, height x width: 246x174 mm, weight: 520 g, 45 Halftones, black and white; 45 Illustrations, black and white
  • Izdošanas datums: 22-Jun-2017
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1472467655
  • ISBN-13: 9781472467652
  • Hardback
  • Cena: 191,26 €
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 194 pages, height x width: 246x174 mm, weight: 520 g, 45 Halftones, black and white; 45 Illustrations, black and white
  • Izdošanas datums: 22-Jun-2017
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1472467655
  • ISBN-13: 9781472467652
Cities are built over the remnants of their past buried beneath their present. We build on what has been built before, whether over foundations formalising previous permanency or over the temporal occupations of ground. But what happens when you shift a city - when you dislodge its occupation of ground towards a new ground, bury it and forget it?

Focusing on Berlins destruction during World War II and its reconstruction after the end of the war, this book offers a rethinking of how the practices of destruction and burial combine to reform the city through geography and how burying a city is intricately tied to forgetting destruction, ruination and trauma. Created from 25 million cubic meters of rubble produced during World War II, Teufelsberg (Devil's Mountain) is the exemplar of the destroyed city. Its critical journey is chronicled in combination with Berlins seven other rubble hills, and their connections to constructing forgetting through burial. Furthermore, the book investigates Berlins sublime relation to Albert Speers urban vision to rival the ancient cities of Rome and Athens through their now shared geographies of seven hills. Finally, there is a central focus on the role of the citizens who cleared Berlins streets of rubble, and the subsequent human relationships between people and ruins.

This book is valuable reading for those interested in Architectural Theory, Urban Geography, Modern History and Urban Design.
List of figures
vii
Preface: the view xi
Acknowledgements xiii
Introduction: reflecting -- above and below 1(18)
City and destruction
3(9)
Mound and Earth
12(7)
1 Ruins: self-portraiture, capturing, forgetting
19(32)
Rubblescape -- working in ruins
19(5)
Ruinenlust -- attraction and spectacle: looking on
24(7)
Self-ruining -- portraits in the rubble
31(6)
Ruins' value -- Speer's romanticism
37(5)
Brutality in ruins -- Kluge's Nuremburg
42(3)
Seven ruins -- Athens, Rome, Berlin
45(6)
2 Memoirs: self-anaesthesia, cultural forgetting
51(30)
Silent voices -- the hiddenness of experience
53(9)
Sebald's self-anaesthesia -- underwriting amnesia
62(8)
Spatial anaesthesia -- the urban flaw
70(11)
3 Burial: abandoning the city, physical forgetting
81(28)
Interring and disposing -- human and material
81(4)
Building out -- the Urstromtal in biomorphic vision
85(13)
Erasing the city -- materiality of trauma
98(11)
4 Disappearance: planting the forest, natural forgetting
109(28)
Covering over -- the psychotope of destruction
109(12)
Placidity of the park -- the nature of leisure
121(6)
Out of the forest -- the nature of law
127(10)
5 New ground: unearthing Teufclsberg, against forgetting
137(31)
Extracting -- scraping back
137(6)
Future archaeology -- unearthing
143(16)
Conclusion: remembering -- undoing forgetting, the reveal
159(1)
Graphiens -- towards the new visible
160(4)
Dissection -- inside the buried city
164(4)
Bibliography 168(7)
Index 175
Benedict Anderson practices in design, architectural theory and public art. He has worked in many different universities, lectured extensively as an invited speaker and exhibited in major exhibitions. He previously held the position as Professor of Spatial Design, University of Technology Sydney.