Unsettling traditional understandings of housing reform as focused on the nuclear family with dependent children, Single People and Mass Housing in Germany, 1850-1930 is the first complete study of single-person mass housing in Germany and the pivotal role this class- and gender-specific building type played for over 80 years-in German architectural culture and society, the transnational Progressive reform movement, Feminist discourse, and International Modernism-and its continued relevance.
Homes for unmarried men and women, or Ledigenheime, were built for nearly every powerful interest group in Germany-progressive, reactionary, and radical alike-from the mid-nineteenth century into the 1920s. Designed by both unknown craftsmen and renowned architects ranging from Peter Behrens to Bruno Taut, these homes fought unregimented lodging in overcrowded working-class dwellings while functioning as apparatuses of moral and social control. A means to societal reintegration, Ledigenheime effectively bridged the public-private divide and rewrote the rules of who was deserving of quality housing-pointing forward to the building programs of Weimar Berlin and Red Vienna, experimental housing in Soviet Russia, Feminist collectives, accommodations for postwar guestworkers, and even housing for the elderly today.
The first complete study of single-person mass housing in Germany and the pivotal role this class- and gender- specific building type has played for over eighty years.
Recenzijos
This insightful study is a must-read for everyone interested in creative approaches to one of the major social crises of the modern ageproviding decent, affordable housing for single people living on their own in industrialized cities. * Abigail A. Van Slyck, Dayton Professor Emerita of Art History and Architectural Studies, Connecticut College, USA * German architecture rewritten from the perspective of the single men and women living in mass housing. Meticulously researched, Erin Eckhold Sassins book is a major contribution to the histories of modernization and urbanization and their highly gendered designs for living. * Sabine Hake, Texas Chair of German Literature and Culture, University of Texas at Austin, USA *
Daugiau informacijos
The first complete study of single-person mass housing in Germany and the pivotal role this class- and gender- specific building type has played for over eighty years.
Introduction: The Unmarried Individual and the Lodger Problem
1. Adolph Kolpings Revolution: Popular Catholicism and Housing Wild Youth
2. Beyond the Company Town: Industrialists House the Roving Male
3. Making the Municipality a Home: Appropriate Luxury for All
4. Homes for Women: Between the Domestic Realm and the Public Sphere
Extended Conclusion: Weimar Twilight and Continued Relevance of the
Ledigenheim Building Type
Erin Eckhold Sassin is Associate Professor of History of Art & Architecture at Middlebury College, USA. Her research focuses on modern architecture and urban culture in Germany and the United States, with a particular interest in how class, gender, and ethnicity inform the built environment. Her most recent work deals with the everyday tragedy of the First World War and the production of architecture within the state of emergency, as well as the intersection of Acoustic Ecology and Architectural History.