This article examines trends in the conceptualisation of German countermonumental architecture that associate monumentality and fascism. The countermonument has been conceptualised as the appropriate form by which to memorialise the Holocaust, given its self-disruptive dynamic and inability to impose a monumental version of the past. However, following recent critiques of memory studies and German architectural discourse, this article argues that the prevailing conceptualisation of the countermonument engenders an ironic slippage from, to use Gillian Rose's terms, the “representation of fascism” to the “fascism of representation”
This dissertation examines a variety of Alternate Histories of the Third Reich from the perspective ...
none1noIn the rapid transformation process of the 20th century architecture, there are not only tang...
The article discusses the commemorative concept of Gunter Demnig’s ongoing art project Stolpersteine...
This article analyses strategies of material commemoration in contemporary urban spaces. Deploying a...
Monuments are historically concerned with claiming a ground that cannot be challenged – seeking to m...
Few issues have possessed the centrality or sparked as much controversy in the postwar history of th...
This article reflects upon the possibility of the visualisation of different forms of collective mem...
The monument materializes absence. This is a way to collectively share marks of the past revealing t...
This thesis takes Peter Eisenman's soon to be built Holocaust memorial as a focal point for consider...
The proliferation of memory-sites following the reunification of Germany in 1990 was a testament to ...
This dissertation constructs an intermedial genealogy of the New Reich Chancellery, a key architectu...
The controversies surrounding the re-establishment of a national memorial in Berlin, the Neue Wache,...
This research project sets out to establish interpretations of the architectural boundary and addres...
The recent opening to the public of large-scale National Socialist installations in Germany – like t...
In the debate over transitional justice and human right issues, Germany‘s "Vergangenheitsbewält...
This dissertation examines a variety of Alternate Histories of the Third Reich from the perspective ...
none1noIn the rapid transformation process of the 20th century architecture, there are not only tang...
The article discusses the commemorative concept of Gunter Demnig’s ongoing art project Stolpersteine...
This article analyses strategies of material commemoration in contemporary urban spaces. Deploying a...
Monuments are historically concerned with claiming a ground that cannot be challenged – seeking to m...
Few issues have possessed the centrality or sparked as much controversy in the postwar history of th...
This article reflects upon the possibility of the visualisation of different forms of collective mem...
The monument materializes absence. This is a way to collectively share marks of the past revealing t...
This thesis takes Peter Eisenman's soon to be built Holocaust memorial as a focal point for consider...
The proliferation of memory-sites following the reunification of Germany in 1990 was a testament to ...
This dissertation constructs an intermedial genealogy of the New Reich Chancellery, a key architectu...
The controversies surrounding the re-establishment of a national memorial in Berlin, the Neue Wache,...
This research project sets out to establish interpretations of the architectural boundary and addres...
The recent opening to the public of large-scale National Socialist installations in Germany – like t...
In the debate over transitional justice and human right issues, Germany‘s "Vergangenheitsbewält...
This dissertation examines a variety of Alternate Histories of the Third Reich from the perspective ...
none1noIn the rapid transformation process of the 20th century architecture, there are not only tang...
The article discusses the commemorative concept of Gunter Demnig’s ongoing art project Stolpersteine...