Präsentation – Despina Stratigakos: „A Women’s Berlin“, 31.10.2009, Berlin

Buchpräsentation im Rahmen des 44. Treffens der deutschsprachigen Frauen-, Lesbenarchive und -bibliotheken in Berlin
Zeit: Samstag 31.10. 2009, 20 Uhr
Ort: Tagungsraum der Weiberwirtschaft, Anklamer Str. 38, rechter Seitenflügel, 5. Stock
Women’s Berlin: Building the Modern City.
Die US-amerikanische Architekturhistorikerin, Despina Stratigakos unternimmt eine faszinierende Reise durch das hauptstädtische Berlin am Anfang des 20. Jahrhunderts, in dem Architektinnen, Designerinnen und Planerinnen ein Netz von neuen Einrichtungen für Frauen geschaffen haben, die größtenteils vergessen sind:
Around the turn 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 emerged to accommodate changing patterns of life and work.
Women’s Berlin retraces this largely forgotten city, which arose in the years between German unification in 1871 and the demise of the monarchy in 1918 and laid the foundation for a novel experience of urban modernity. Although the phenomenon of women claming urban space was widespread in this period, Berlin’s concentration of women’s building projects produced a more fully realized vision of an alternative metropolis. Female patrons called upon female design professionals to help them define and articulate their architectural needs. Many of the projects I analyze in the book represent a collaborative effort uniting female patrons, architects, and designers to explore the nature of female aesthetics and spaces.
At the same time that women were transforming the built environment, they were remaking Berlin in words and images. Female journalists, artists, political activists, and social reformers portrayed women as influential actors on the urban scene and encouraged female audiences to view their relationship to the city in a radically different light. Women’s remapping of Berlin connected the imaginary to the physical, dreams to asphalt, and inextricably linked the creation of the modern woman with that of the modern city.
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