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Siegfried Kracauer’s texts are a widely investigated field of sociology and media studies. It is less well known that Kracauer was a graduate architect, practised during World War I and was awarded his PhD after writing a thesis in 1915 in the field of architectural history. After the war, Kracauer published numerous critiques with a special focus on the architectural developments of the time. They document an interest in architectural phenomena ranging from a reflection on his own experiences to a general perspective on the subjectivity of the modern architect, as well as more universal social phenomena.
In essence, this essay claims that the lack of ornamentation in modern architecture can be grasped as an ornamental concept of the new social order of capitalism.
In the first half of the 20th century, when architecture and literature dreamed of transparency, glass was the material these dreams were made of. However, the historiography of both fields usually focuses on a few canonical works by male authors to tell the story of this shared fascination. Departing from this imbalance, this essay takes the opportunity to explore the glass culture of modernity through the lens of female projects whose stories often take place simultaneously on different continents. While the former silent film actor Evelyn Word Leigh builds a glass house for herself in Nyack, New York, artists and writers based in Europe – like Claude Cahun, Anaïs Nin, and Hilda 'H.D.' Doolittle – flesh out imaginary glass domes as construction sites of artistic subjectivities. Whether homes or domes, these creative women used glass environments to question and renegotiate their assigned places in Western societies, challenging the boundaries of female agency.
Der Anblick ist überwältigend. Ein buntes Sammelsurium der unterschiedlichsten Dinge, die sich dicht an dicht in den Fächern des raumhohen Regals drängen, eine Steilwand aus Wimmelbildern im Wunderkammer-Format. Wenn wir die Fächer allerdings genauer betrachten, stellt sich allmählich der Eindruck ein, dass es doch so etwas wie eine Ordnung der Dinge gibt. Nur welche?
Warum in der Politik so viel von »Architektur« gesprochen wird und warum Architektur an sich nicht demokratisch sein kann, darüber hat sich der Architekturhistoriker Carsten Ruhl Gedanken gemacht