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  • Marnie Fogg

    Fashion Illustration, 1930 to 1970. From Harper's…

  • Markus Miessen

    The Nightmare of Participation

  • Zbynek Baladran, Vit Havranek (Hg.)

    Atlas of Transformation

  • Mike Jay

    High Society. Mind Altering Drugs in History and Culture

  • S. Gaensheimer, S. von Olfers (Hg.)

    Not in Fashion. Photography and Fashion in the 90s

  • Francis Alys

    A Story of Deception

  • Dominique Ghiggi

    Baumschule. Kultivierung des Stadtdschungels

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    The Just City

  • Teal Triggs

    Fanzines

  • Jan Verwoert

    Tell Me What You Want, What You Really, Really Want

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    History Becomes Form. Moscow Conceptualism

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    Selected Maria Lind Writing

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    Judgment and Contemporary Art Criticism

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    From Hieroglyphics to Isotype. A Visual Autobiography

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    Atmosphäre. Hypothesen zum Prozess der räumlichen…

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    Understanding Stadtforschung

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    Shadowplayers. The Rise and Fall of Factory Records

  • Giorgio Agamben

    Nacktheiten

  • Florian A. Schmidt, Peter Lasch,…

    Kritische Masse. Von Profis und Amateuren im Design

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    Left, Right, Up, Down. Neue Ansätze für die Gestaltung von…

  • Tony Conrad, Jutta Koether, John Miller

    XXX Macarena LP

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    Socialism or Barbarism? The Selected Writings of Rosa…

  • Lyle Owerko

    The Boom Box Project. The Machines, the Music...

  • Enn Ots

    Decoding Theoryspeak. An Illustrated Guide to Architectural…

  • Veit Erlmann

    Reason and Resonance. A History of Modern Aurality

  • S. Ehmann, R. Klanten (Hg.)

    Turning Pages. Editorial Design for Print Media

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    Kieler Woche. Geschichte eines Designwettbewerbs

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    Las Vegas im Rückspiegel. Die Stadt in Theorie, Fotografie…

  • Andres Lepik

    Small Scale, Big Change

  • Benedict Boucsein

    Graue Architektur. Nachkriegsarchitektur

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    Berlin plant. Plädoyer für ein Planwerk Innenstadt Berlin 2…

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    Dara Birnbaum. Technology/Transformation: Wonder Woman

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    Assume Vivid Astro Focus

  • Michael Merrill

    Louis Kahn. On the Thoughtful Making of Spaces

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    Abstract City #04. Urbanes Hausen

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    Elfter September. 2010

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    Dance with Camera

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    Joan Jett

  • Umool Umool Vol.9

    The Rejected, the Recycled, the Regenerated

  • Margit Mayer

    Civic City Cahier 1. Social Movements in the (Post-)…

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    Contemporary Painting in Context

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    The Biennial Reader

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    Typomag. Typography in Magazines

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    Los Logos. Compass

  • Carsten Nicolai

    Moiré Index

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    Coma

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    The Master Builder. Talking with Ken Briggs

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    Gestaltung denken. Ein Reader für Designer und Architekten

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    Candide. Journal for Architectural Knowledge Heft 2

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    Dialogue between Fashion and Death

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    Total Housing. Alternatives to Urban Sprawl

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    The Portable John Latham

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    New Communities

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    Trends and Fads

  • Igor Marjanovic, Katerina Rüedi Ray

    Marina City. Bertrand Goldberg's Urban Vision

  • Ingo Niermann

    Solution 186–195. Dubai Democracy

  • Pedro Paiva, Joao Maria Gusmao

    On the Movement of the Fried Egg and Other Astronomical…

  • Harald Bodenschatz

    Städtebau in Berlin. Schreckbild und Vorbild für Europa

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    Dead on Arrival

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    Berlin Sampler. Le son de Berlin de 1904 à 2009

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    Every Day is a Good Day. The Visual Art of John Cage

  • Deutsche Bauzeitung

    Wohnlabor Berlin

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    Ret Marut Handshake (Vinyl)

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    Formlose Ähnlichkeiten oder die Fröhliche Wissenschaft des…

  • Matthew Beaumont, Gregory Dart (Hg.)

    Restless Cities

  • Denis Wood

    Rethinking the Power of Maps

  • Koen Brams, Dirk Pültau

    The Clandestine in the Work of Jef Cornelis

  • Bless

    Retroperspective Home N° 30 – N° 41

  • Reinhold Martin

    Utopia's Ghost. Architecture and Postmodernism, Again

  • Architecture Words 5

    Max Bill: Form, Function, Beauty = Gestalt.

  • D. Diederichsen, C. Ruhm (Hg.)

    Utopia of Sound. Immediacy and Non-Simultaneity

  • Michael Schmidt

    89/90

  • Slavoj Zizek

    Living in the End Times

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    The Studio Reader. On the Space of Artists

  • IDEA Magazine

    IDEA 341. Dialogues with Tatsuya Ariyama

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    Design/Research 02

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    Chain Ring

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    Show and Tell. A Chronicle of Group Material

  • Duy Nguyen

    Über Origami

  • Gustavus Stadler

    The Politics of Recorded Sound (Social Text)

  • Work AC

    49 Cities

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    Introduction to Civil War (Semiotexte)

  • Wear. Number Two

    The Journal of HomeShop

  • Tirdad Zolghadr

    Solution 168-185. America

  • Yoshiharu Tsukamoto, Momoyo Kaijima

    The Architectures of Atelier Bow-Wow. Behaviorology

  • Tara Rodgers

    Pink Noises. Women on Electronic Music and Sound

  • Frederique Bergholtz, Iberia Perez (Hg.)

    (Mis)reading Masquerades

  • Stephen Graham

    Cities under Siege. The New Military Urbanism

  • Brandon LaBelle

    Acoustic Territories. Sound Culture and Everyday Life.…

  • Helmut Höge

    Pollerforschung

  • Sara De Bondt, Fraser Muggeridg

    The Form of the Book Book

  • Antoni Folkers

    Modern Architecture in Africa

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    Curating and the Educational Turn

  • Judy Pray

    Garden Wisdom and Know-How

  • Kathrin Röggla

    Die Alarmbereiten

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    Was passiert? Stellungnahmen zur Lage der Universität

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    Dubai Düsseldorf

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    Sun Ra. Interviews & Essays

Berlin. City Without Form

Strategies for a Different Architecture
Berlin was shaped by the events of the twentieth century in a process of “automatic urbanism.” More than any other metropolis, the city absorbed the forces of that epoch — modernity, fascism, two world wars, Stalinism, socialism, the Cold War, revolt, capitalism — and gave them form. This book shows how even today, opposed ideological, political, economic, and military forces continue to produce unplanned structures and activities and urban phenomena beyond the categories of urban design and architecture that conceal rich potential. Berlin reveals particularly clearly phenomena that have shaped urban development in the twentieth century in other places as well: conglomeration, collision of borders, ­destruction, void, mass, metabolism, and simulation. The present book, which caused a sensation when first published in German twenty years ago, is now being published in English for the first time. Its surprising and informative analysis of ­Berlin as a prototype of the modern city destroys the ideologies of heroic modernity as well as the new nationalisms and shows how the modern city “as found” can become the point of departure for new forms of context-specific architecture and urban planning.
Taking Berlin as a prototype, Philipp Oswalt’s lucid analysis describes how much the built environment of cities is influenced by the unintended side-effects of political, economic, and technological processes. This “automatic urbanism” reveals modernist master-planning and national building traditions as being a myth. Instead, the book offers a both socially and ecologically more sensitive, more responsible approach to develop cities “as found.”
Saskia Sassen, Columbia University New York
This English edition of Philipp Oswalt’s now-classic study could not be more timely. Every effort to understand the modern city must contend with Berlin, the twentieth century’s anti-capital. Its lessons, presented here with singular insight and authority, remain necessary to anyone thinking about what that word — “city” — might still mean today.
Reinhold Martin, Columbia University New York
Berlin has never only been a theatre in the battle between ideas and ideologies. Rather, it has always been the material means by which these ideas clash against each other. If the struggle for our futures must take place in Berlin, as our historical moment seems to demand, there is no better guide than Philipp Oswalt’s now classic Berlin: City Without Form. His scholarly ingenuity and perceptive architect’s eye are only matched by a commitment to the future of his city.
Eyal Weizman, Goldsmiths/University of London


Philipp Oswalt with Anthony Fontenot
Berlin. City Without Form
Dom Publishers, 2021, 978-3-86922-274-5