TY - JFULL A1 - Dolff-Bonekämper, Gabi A1 - Paulus, Jörg A1 - Sellmann, Annika A1 - Vogel, Carolin A1 - Bargholz, Ortrun A1 - Herrmann, Moritz Peter A1 - Löffler, Beate A1 - Kretschmann, Schirin A1 - Lotter, Stefanie A1 - Ehrenpreis, David A1 - Bockelmann, Leo A1 - Langner, Sigrun A1 - Schönberger, Sonya A1 - Majdzadeh, Bahar ED - Bogner, Simone ED - Dolff-Bonekämper, Gabi ED - Meier, Hans-Rudolf T1 - Collecting Loss N2 - Wer sich mit "Identität" und "Erbe" befasst, also mit dem Zusammenhang zwischen der Konstituierung und Stabilität von Gemeinwesen und dem Bewahren von Gütern, Orten und Überlieferungen, kommt nicht umhin, sich auch mit Verlusten zu befassen. Verlust bezeichnet hier nicht die Abwesenheit eines Gutes, das Erbe war oder hätte werden können, sondern die soziale Beziehung zu dem verlorenen Gut und zu den Umständen seines Verlorengehens oder auch den Versuchen, es wiederzugewinnen. T3 - Schriftenreihe des DFG-Graduiertenkollegs 2227 "Identität und Erbe" - 1 KW - Verlust KW - Sammeln KW - Identität KW - Kulturerbe KW - Archiv Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:gbv:wim2-20201221-43217 PB - Bauhaus-Universitätsverlag CY - Ilmtal-Weinstraße ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Speitkamp, Winfried T1 - Identität durch Erbe? Historische Jubiläen und Jahrestage in der Erinnerungskultur N2 - Vortrag, gehalten am 13.12.2016 im Rahmen der Ringvorlesung des Graduiertenkollegs "Identität und Erbe" an der Bauhaus-Universität Weimar T3 - Neue Bauhausvorträge - 2 KW - Kulturerbe KW - Identität Y1 - 2017 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:gbv:wim2-20171130-36467 ER - TY - THES A1 - Arboleda, Pablo T1 - Reckoning with Incompiuto Siciliano: Unfinished Public Works as Modern Ruins and All which it Entails N2 - Since the end of the 1950s, Italy has focused part of its modernization on the erection of public works. Due to corruption, mafia, and further malpractice, this form of development has occasionally failed, producing a high number of constructions that have remained unfinished for decades. In 2007, the group of artists Alterazioni Video constructed an informal survey in the form of an on-line tool open to public contributions, which revealed that there are 395 unfinished public works in Italy from which 156, approximately 39.5%, are located in Sicily alone. In view of such a statistic, Alterazioni Video opted to coin the term ‘Incompiuto Siciliano’ – literally ‘Sicilian Incompletion’ – to refer to unfinished public works as a formal architectural style. This re-interpretation, which aims to convey the recovered dignity of these ‘modern ruins’, considers unfinished public works a type of heritage with the potential to represent the entirety of Italian society. Furthermore, it goes as far as to say an unfinished public work is ‘Incompiuto Siciliano’ despite being located in another of the Italian regions. This doctoral dissertation embraces the artists’ argument to develop a complete study of Incompiuto Siciliano by embedding this architectural style/artistic project within the main debates on modern ruins at present. This is important because it is expected to contribute to the revalorization and eventual recommissioning of unfinished sites by validating Incompiuto Siciliano in the realm of academia. Furthermore, this work aspires to be a worthwhile source of information for future investigations dealing with cultural interpretations of incompletion in any other context – a not unreasonable goal considering how unfinished works are one of the key urban topics after the 2008 financial crisis. Hence, this doctoral dissertation uses Incompiuto Siciliano to discuss a different perspective in each of the five chapters and, though these can be read as independent contributions, the objective is that all chapters read together, form a clear, concise, continuous unit. And so it must be said this is not a dissertation about unfinished public works in Italy; this is a dissertation about Incompiuto Siciliano as an artistic response to unfinished public works in Italy – which clearly requires an interdisciplinary analysis involving Urban Studies, Cultural Geography, Contemporary Archaeology, Critical Heritage and Visual Arts. KW - Kulturerbe KW - incompiuto siciliano KW - unfinished public works KW - modern ruins KW - incompletion KW - heritage KW - aesthetics KW - art KW - culture Y1 - 2017 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:gbv:wim2-20170715-32656 ER - TY - THES A1 - Arzmi, Azmah T1 - Reinterpreting Marzahn, Berlin & Petržalka, Bratislava: From Process of State Socialist Utopia to Utopia of State Capitalist Process N2 - Housing estates were fundamentally conceived upon state socialist utopia ideas to provide standard housing for citizens. While former state socialist housing estates have been extensively researched in the field of architecture, urban and sociology studies, there is still a gap in identifying how production processes affect morphological changes during the post-socialist era. This thesis compares the processes in the production of the largest housing estates of Marzahn in GDR and Petržalka in Czechoslovakia from 1970 to 1989 through contextual analysis of primary and secondary sources, which include visual maps, diagrams from professional architecture and planning journals, government documents and textbooks, as well as academic journals, books and newspaper articles. Then it discusses how these processes inadvertently created conducive conditions affecting their development in the market economy after 1989. It then interprets the results through application of Actor-Network Theory and Historical Institutionalism, while conceptualising them through David Harvey’s dialectical utopianism theory. Harvey (2000) delineates two types of utopia, one of spatial form and one of process. The former refers to materialised ideals in physical forms whereas the latter refers to the ongoing process of spatializing. The thesis aims to show how the production of Marzahn in GDR was more path dependent on policies established in 1950s and 1960s whereas Petržalka was a product of new Czechoslovakian policies in 1970s, changing aspects of the urban planning process, a manifestation of a more emphatic technocratic thinking on a wider scale. This ultimately influences the trajectories of development after 1989, showing more effects in Petržalka. KW - Kulturerbe KW - state socialist utopia KW - centralized planning KW - GDR KW - Czechoslovakia KW - mass housing estates Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:gbv:wim2-20210315-43927 ER -