Berlin, Washington, 1800-2000 : capital cities, cultural representation, and national identities
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Berlin, Washington, 1800-2000 : capital cities, cultural representation, and national identities
(Publications of the German Historical Institute)
German Historical Institute , Cambridge University Press, 2005
Available at 4 libraries
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Library, Institute of Developing Economies, Japan External Trade Organization図
D||301.22||B118671099
Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Contents of Works
- Capitals in modern history: Inventing urban spaces for the nation / Andreas W. Daum
- Siting federal capitals: The American and German debates / Kenneth R. Bowling and Uirike Gerhard
- Written capitals and capital topography: Berlin and Washington in travel literature / Walter Erhart
- Prime meridians, national time, and the symbolic authority of capitals in the Nineteenth century / Martin H. Geyer
- Washington and Berlin: national capitals in a networked world / Carl Abbott
- State, volk, and monumental architecture in Nazi-Era Berlin / Dietmar Schirmer
- Monuments of catastrophe: Holocaust architecture in Washington and Berlin / Janet Ward
- Capital gardens: The Mall and the Tiergarten in comparative perspective / Christof Mauch
- Socialism on display: East Berlin as a capital / Brian Ladd
- Washington under Federal rule, 1871-1945 / Alan H. Lessoff
- "Everyday" protest and the culture of conflict in Berlin, 1830-1980 / Belinda Davis
- Marches on Washington and the creation of national public spaces, 1894 to the present / Lucy Barber
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This collection examines the urban spaces of Berlin and Washington and provides a comparative cultural history of two eminent nation-states in the modern era. Each of the cities has assumed, at times, a mythical quality and they have been seen as collective symbols, with ambitions and contradictions that mirror the nation-states they represent. Such issues such stand in the centre of this volume. The authors ask what these two capitals have meant for the nation and explore the relations between architecture, political ideas, and social reality. Topics range from Thomas Jefferson's ideas about the new capital of the United States to the creation of the Holocaust memorial in Berlin, from nineteenth-century visitors to small-town Washington to the protesters of the 1968 student movement in West Berlin. This lively collection of essays speaks to audiences as diverse as historians, urban sociologists, architects and readers interested in cultural studies.
Table of Contents
- Preface Christof Mauch
- Part I. Cities as Capitals on a Global Scale: 1. Capitals in modern history: inventing urban spaces for the nation Andreas W. Daum
- Part II. The Capital in the Nation: 2. Siting the capital: between Bundesdorf and Metropolis Ken Bowling and Ulrike Gerhard
- 3. Written capitals: national images and capital topography in travel literature Walter Erhard
- 4. Prime meridians, national time, and symbolic authority of capitals in the nineteenth century Martin H. Geyer
- 5. Washington and Berlin: national capitals in a networked world Carl Abbott
- Part III. Architecture, Memory, and Space: 6. Monumental architecture and national identity in Berlin: the case of national socialism Dietmar Schirmer
- 7. Memorializing the Holocaust in Berlin and Washington Janet Ward
- 8. Capital Gardens: the Mall in Washington and the Tiergarten in Berlin Christof Mauch
- 9. Socialism on display: East Berlin as a capital Brian Ladd
- Part IV. Political Power and Capital Functions: 10. Washington, D.C. under Federal Rule, 1871-1945 Alan H. Lessoff
- 11. 'Everyday' protest and the culture of conflict in Berlin Belinda Davis
- 12. Marches on Washington and the creation of National Public Spaces, 1894 to the present Lucy Barber.
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