For Siegfried Kracauer, the urban ornament was not just an aspect of design; it was the medium through which city dwellers interpreted the metropolis itself. In "Ornaments of the Metropolis," Henrik Reeh traces variations on the theme of the ornament in Kracauer's writings on urbanism, from his early journalism in Germany between the wars to his "sociobiography" of Jacques Offenbach in Paris. Kracauer (1889-1966), often associated with the Frankfurt School and the intellectual milieu of Walter Benjamin, is best known for his writings on cinema and the philosophy of history. Reeh examines Kracauer's lesser-known early work, much of it written for the trendsetting newspaper "Frankfurter Zeitung" in the 1920s and early 1930s, and analyzes Kracauer's continuing reflections on modern urban life, through the pivotal idea of ornament. Kracauer deciphers the subjective experience of the city by viewing fragments of the city as dynamic ornaments; an employment exchange, a day shelter for the homeless, a movie theater, and an amusement park become urban microcosms. Reeh focuses on three substantial works written by Kracauer before his emigration to the United States in 1940. In the early autobiographical novel "Ginster, Written by Himself," a young architect finds aesthetic pleasure in the ornamental forms that are largely unused in the profession of the time. The collection "Streets of Berlin and Elsewhere," with many essays from Kracauer's years in Berlin, documents the subjectiveness of urban life. Finally, "Jacques Offenbach and the Paris of His Time" shows how the superficial--in a sense, ornamental--milieu of the operetta evolved into a critical force during the Second Empire. Reeh argues that Kracauer's novel, essays, and historiography all suggest ways in which the subjective can reappropriate urban life. The book also includes a series of photographs by the author that reflect the ornamental experience of the metropolis in Paris, Frankfurt, and other cities.
"Henrik Reeh's Ornaments of the Metropolis uncovers the previously hidden history of Kracauer's intellectual development and provides an invaluable portrait of one of the key critics of 20th-century Weimar Germany. In this clear and very well written account, Reeh shows Kracauer in all his complexity and brilliance as he wrestles with the emergence of the modern metropolis and modern urban mass culture." David Grahame Shane, Graduate School of Architecture, Preservation and Planning, Columbia University "Henrik Reeh's Ornaments of the Metropolis uncovers the previously hidden history of Kracauer's intellectual development and provides an invaluable portrait of one of the key critics of 20th-century Weimar Germany. In this clear and very well written account, Reeh shows Kracauer in all his complexity and brilliance as he wrestles with the emergence of the modern metropolis and modern urban mass culture." David Grahame Shane , Graduate School of Architecture, Preservation and Planning, Columbia University "Henrik Reeh's interpretation of Kracauer's neglected urban writings is brilliantly argued from a humanistic perspective. Written as a series of variations on the theme of the metropolitan ornament, the book deftly demonstrates how Kracauer's urban investigations integrate the many-faceted ornament into the experience of modernity. Similarly, Reeh intricately weaves the strands of Kracauer's own words and perceptions, the experiences of both writer and reader, and the process of individual and collective memory into a subtle and admirable work. His illuminating perspective reveals how Kracauer extended the field of the ornament beyond the merely decorative and art-historical to include everyday items, the transitory and traumatic, vision and writing."--M. Christine Boyer, William R. Kenan, Jr. Professor, School of Architecture, Princeton University "The enduring importance of Siegfried Kracauer as writer, social critic, and urban theorist is amply confirmed by Henrik Reeh's *Ornaments of the Metropolis*, which is arguably the most intelligent and persuasive account of architecture as process, and one of the most incisive and subtle critiques of commodity culture in recent memory. At the same time, Reeh's analyses open up intriguing possibilities for more balanced and historically more richly nuanced reassessments of Kracauer's contemporary, Walter Benjamin."--Donald Preziosi, Department of the History of Art and Centre for Visual Studies, University of Oxford
| List of Illustrations | p. vii |
| Preface | p. ix |
| Abbreviations | p. x |
| Foreword | p. ix |
| Abbreviations | p. x |
| Introduction | p. 1 |
| From Everyday Life as an Architect to Urban Consciousness | p. 15 |
| The Resubjectivization of Modern Urban Culture | p. 19 |
| The Everyday Life and Urban Perception of the Architect | p. 37 |
| Beyond Functional Space: The Ornament | p. 55 |
| Discovering the City as a Reflective Spree | p. 73 |
| Conclusion to Part I | p. 83 |
| From Individual City Cognition to the Encounter with the Metropolitan Crisis of Memory | p. 89 |
| Ornament, Ratio, and Reason | p. 93 |
| Urban Ornaments and Subjective Experience | p. 107 |
| Space Analysis and Social Critique | p. 123 |
| Improvisation and Memory | p. 135 |
| Conclusion to Part II | p. 161 |
| The City -- A Sphere for Collective Memory | p. 165 |
| History and Urban Collectivity | p. 167 |
| Conclusions and Perspectives | p. 193 |
| Notes | p. 213 |
| Bibliography | p. 239 |
| Index | p. 243 |
| Table of Contents provided by Publisher. All Rights Reserved. |
ISBN: 9780262681636
ISBN-10: 0262681633
Audience:
Professional
For Ages: 22+ years old
Format:
Paperback
Language:
English
Number Of Pages: 264
Published: 8th September 2006
Dimensions (cm): 25.4 x 17.8
x 1.5
Weight (kg): 0.612