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[electronic resource]

The Word in StoneThe Role of Architecture in the National Socialist Ideology

Robert R. Taylor - Personal Name;

The Word in Stone: The Role of Architecture in the National Socialist Ideology by Robert R. Taylor examines how Hitler’s regime sought to transform the built environment into a material language of power, identity, and control. Far more than background to political history, architecture stood at the very center of the Nazi project: a means of embodying ideology in stone and concrete, making visible the myths of nation, race, and destiny. Taylor traces how Hitler himself—an aspiring architect before he was a politician—invested architecture with symbolic authority, and how party ideologues and professional architects worked to give “form” to concepts of Volk, community, and health. Architecture became an instrument for forging social order and unity, whether in monumental state buildings, housing projects, or the planning of new cities designed to project a distinctly German future. The book moves from early nationalist views of architecture and their claims of “suppression” and “decadence” in German design since 1850 to the National Socialist redefinition of architectural values as authentically German, healthy, and community-focused. Chapters address the ideological stakes of monumental forms, “community” buildings meant to embody solidarity, structures designed to regulate social life, and architectural programs linked to racial hygiene and physical vitality. Taylor also examines the unrealized vision of the “new German city,” as well as the eventual failure of these architectural ambitions to secure widespread legitimacy—when the “word” of stone fell on deaf ears. Thoroughly researched and rigorously argued, The Word in Stone demonstrates how architecture was mobilized as propaganda and practice in service of totalitarian aims. For historians of modern Europe, architecture, and ideology, it is a sobering study of how aesthetics, politics, and power became fused in one of the darkest regimes of the twentieth century. This title is part of UC Presss Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California Press’s mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in 1974.


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1 online resource (358 pages)
Language
English
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9780520325227
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Electronic books
ARCHITECTURE 
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