A Womens Berlin: Building the Modern City
By (Author) Despina Stratigakos
University of Minnesota Press
University of Minnesota Press
1st November 2008
United States
General
Non Fiction
Urban communities
Gender studies: women and girls
720.82
Paperback
256
Width 178mm, Height 254mm, Spine 15mm
Around the beginning of the twentieth century, women began to claim Berlin as their own, expressing a vision of the German capital that embraced their feminine modernity, both culturally and architecturally. Women located their lives and made their presence felt in the streets and institutions of this dynamic metropolis. From residences to restaurants, schools to exhibition halls, a visible network of women's spaces arose to accommodate changing patterns of life and work.
Winner of the Milka Bliznakov Prize
Winner of the 2009 DAAD Book Prize of the German Studies Association
"Clearly written, beautifully illustrated, and based on wide reading in archival and published sources, this book should be of great interest to all historians of modern Germany, of womens history, and of architecture." German Studies Review
"Stratigakos has done us a great service by investing the important architectural movement of Wilhelmine Germany with the question of gender. ...her volume will be unavoidable reading for anyone wishing to have a critical and more comprehensive understanding of the development of Berlin as a major architectural centre."The Journal of Architecture
"Despina Stratigakos takes us on a fascinating journey into a largely forgotten city at the heart of early 20th century metropolitan Berlin. Both imaginary and physical, A Womens Berlin is a space of agency in which women architects, designers, and patrons shaped not only a network of new institutions in the city, but also a modern female subjectivity and urban identity for themselves as public citizens." Eve Blau, Harvard University
"A groundbreaking piece of scholarship building bridges among gender studies, cultural history, and architecture, A Womens Berlin is an essential addition to any institutional library or specialized bibliography." Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians
"Stratigakos has succeeded in crafting a highly readable and fascinating account that is a well-researched contribution to both Wilhelmine and Weimar scholarship." Journal of Design History