Single People and Mass Housing in Germany, 1850-1930
Work detail
"Unsettling traditional understandings of housing reform as focused on the nuclear family with dependent children, Single People and Mass Housing in Germany (1850-1930): (No) Home Away From Home is the first complete study of single-person mass housing in Germany and the pivotal role this class- and gender-specific building type played for over 80 years--in German architectural culture and society, the transnational Progressive reform movement, Feminist discourse, and International Modernism--and its continued relevance. Homes for unmarried men and women, or Ledigenheime, were built for nearly every powerful interest group in Germany--progressive, reactionary, and radical alike--from the mid-nineteenth century into the 1920s. Designed by both unknown craftsmen and renowned architects ranging from Peter Behrens to Bruno Taut, these homes fought unregimented lodging in overcrowded working-class dwellings while functioning as apparatuses of moral and social control. A means to societal reintegration, Ledigenheime effectively bridged the public-private divide and rewrote the rules of who was deserving of quality housing--pointing forward to the building programs of Weimar Berlin and Red Vienna, experimental housing in Soviet Russia, Feminist collectives, accommodations for postwar "guestworkers," and even housing for the elderly today"--
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- Open Author
Deborah Ascher Barnstone
- Open Author
Erin Eckhold Sassin
- Open Author
Thomas O. Haakenson
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