PLEASE NOTE: Seminar starts on 17 November!
Language requirements: min. English B2
At the end of World War II Berlin , the former capital of Hitlers Third Reich, was largely destroyed. But the area-wide destructions also held an opportunitiy: the possibility to rebuild Berlin as a totally new city – in modernists words: as a better city. And indeed Berlin changed dramatically – but not in the way modern architects and urban planners had envisioned it in the post-war period.
Quite differing proposals were made in East and West Berlin. Especially for the so-called Capital of the Cold War it proves to be true that architecture is not just a mirror to the society which builds it – but that architecture also shapes the lives of the people living with and within it.
Using examples such as Karl-Marx-Allee, Hansaviertel, Gropiusstadt, Potsdamer Platz et al. this seminar retraces the stations and phases of reconstruction with a focus on political and cultural developments. The most influential concepts of 20th century urban planning will be presented. In addition the seminar aims to be an exercise in (architecture) criticism.
Regular attendance and participation in class, as well as reading the assigned texts is obligatory. Short Presentations should be hold. Every participant is obliged to write a scientific essay (5 pages) and an architecture critique (1-2 pages), which standards and form will be subject of at least one session. The essay and/or the architecture critique can be submitted in German and/or English. The seminar will be held in English.
This seminar is open to all students in the Arts and Humanities, as well as Social Sciences. It may particularly suit students with a background and/or interest in urban planning, urban studies, metropolitan studies, cultural studies, geography, sociology, art history and history. |