Skip to product information
1 of 1

The architecture of social reform

Regular price £85.00
Sale price £85.00 Regular price £85.00
Sale Sold out
Explores how housing design came to occupy the center of the modernist project in Germany.
  • Format:
  • 07 June 2022
View Product Details
The architecture of social reform explores the fascinating intellectual origins of modern architecture’s obsession with domesticity. Copiously illustrated, Rousset’s revealing analysis demonstrates how questions over aesthetics, style, urbanization, and technology that gripped the modernist imagination were deeply ingrained in a larger concern to reform society through housing. The increasing demand for new housing in Germany’s rapidly growing cities fostered critical exchanges between a heterogeneous group of actors, including architects, urban theorists, planners, and social scientists, who called for society to be freed from class antagonism through the provision of good, modest, traditionally-minded domestic design. Offering a compelling account of architecture’s ability to act socially, the book provocatively argues that architectural theory underwent its most critical epistemological transformation in relation to the dynamics of modern class politics long before the arrival of the avant-garde.
files/i.png Icon
Price: £85.00
Pages: 240
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Imprint: Manchester University Press
Series: Studies in Design and Material Culture
Publication Date: 07 June 2022
ISBN: 9781526159687
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

ARCHITECTURE / Buildings / Residential, History of architecture, ARCHITECTURE / History / Modern (late 19th Century to 1945), HISTORY / Europe / Germany, History of art, History

REVIEWS Icon

'Isabel Rousset provides a valuable introduction to the debates prompted by the challenges of housing the German middle classes, the Mittelstand, in the sixty or so years before the first world war, as towns and cities were transformed by unprecedented urbanisation. In four broadly chronological chapters, she explores the influence of various interpretations of tradition, rooted so often in the local and regional, a set of associations captured in the untranslatable word Heimat. Her account thus represents a break with earlier studies of German modernism that emphasised the unbridgeable differences between the ideas of an emerging modernist avant-garde and an approach to architecture and urbanism at home with the past and traditional German culture.'
Nicholas Bullock, Architectural History

Isabel Rousset teaches architectural history at Curtin University

Introduction
1 Building from the inside out
2 The interiorisation of life
3 Streets for movement, streets for dwelling
4 The culture of the visible
Conclusion
Index