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Stadt und Urbanität von Dieter Läpple - Inhaltsangabe


Mit Beiträgen von Niklas Bender, Konrad Ehlich, Ottmar Ette,  Kerstin Evert, Susanne Frank, Bartholomäus Grill, Hartmut Häußermann,  Uli Hellweg, Franck Hofmann, Christopher Hutton, Mara Kurotschka, Dieter  Läpple, Markus Messling, Franz Oswald, A.J.M. Roobeek, Jürgen Trabant,  Jörn Walter, Sigrid Weigel und Heike WieseStädte sind die vielleicht  vielschichtigsten Gebilde, die die Menschen geschaffen haben. In ihren  vielfältigen materiellen und ästhetischen Formen verkörpert sich das  kollektive Gedächtnis, zugleich verdichten sich in ihnen die  ökonomischen, sozialen, technologischen, ökologischen und kulturellen  Kämpfe und Wandlungsprozesse der globalen Gesellschaft. Welche  Entwicklungstendenzen und Probleme zeichnen sich in dem gegenwärtigen  weltumspannenden Verstädterungsprozess ab, nach welchen Kriterien werden  Städte heute betrachtet und gestaltet, wie werden sie umgebaut? Welchen  wechselseitigen Konstitutionszusammenhang gibt es zwischen  Stadtentwicklung und Geschlechterbeziehungen, zwischen Körper, Sprache  und Stadtraum? Welches urbane Bewusstsein archivieren Kunst und  Literatur, welche Lebensformen erproben sie prospektiv?Vor diesem  Hintergrund versammelt der Band Stellungnahmen verschiedener  Disziplinen, die sich mit den Bereichen Stadtentwicklung, Stadtplanung,  Architektur, Geschlechterforschung, Stadt und Sprache, Literatur, Kultur  und Urbanität auseinandersetzen, um sie in einen gemeinsamen  Diskussionskontext zu rufen und so neue Verständnisperspektiven zu  eröffnen.
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When you’re different, sometimes you don’t see the millions of people who accept you for what you are. All you notice is the person who doesn’t.

— Jodi Picoult (via salveo)
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salveo:

by lamusique news
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 Stasiland
Author: Anna Funder

Truth can be stranger – and more fascinating – than fiction.  Anna Funder tells extraordinary stories from the underbelly of the most  perfected surveillance state of all time, the former East Germany.
Funder  meets Miriam, the sixteen-year-old who might have started World War  III. She visits the regime’s cartographer, obsessed to this day with the  Berlin Wall, then gets drunk with the legendary ‘Mik Jegger’ of the  east, once declared by the authorities ‘no longer to exist’. And she  finds spies and Stasi men, still loyal to the Firm as they wait for the  next revolution.
Stasiland is a lyrical, at times funny  account of the courage some people found to withstand the dictatorship,  and the consequences for those who collaborated. Funder explores the  daily chaos and harsh beauty of Berlin, a place where some people are  trying to remember, and others just as hard to forget.
Stasiland is a brilliant debut by a prodigiously gifted writer.
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Urban Code

Urban Code
100 Lessons for Understanding the City
Anne Mikoleit and Moritz Pürckhauer

Cities speak, and this little book helps us understand their language. Considering the urban landscape not from the abstract perspective of an urban planner but from the viewpoint of an attentive observer, Urban Code offers 100 “lessons”—maxims, observations, and bite-size truths, followed by short essays—that teach us how to read the city. This is a user’s guide to the city, a primer of urban literacy, at the pedestrian level. The reader (like the observant city stroller) can move from “People walk in the sunshine” (lesson 1) to “Street vendors are positioned according to the path of the sun” (lesson 2); consider possible connections between the fact that “Locals and tourists use the streets at different times” (lesson 41) and “Tourists stand still when they’re looking at something” (lesson 68); and weigh the apparent contradiction of lesson 73, “Nightlife hotspots increase pedestrian traffic” and lesson 74, “People are afraid of the dark.”

A lesson may seem self-evident (“Grocery stores are important local destinations”—of course they are!) but considered in the context of other lessons, it becomes part of a natural logic. With Urban Code, we learn what to notice if we want to understand the city. We learn to detect patterns in the relationships between people and the urban environment. Each lesson is accompanied by an icon-like image; in addition to these 100 drawings, thirty photographs of street scenes illustrate the text. The photographs are stills from films shot in the Manhattan neighborhood of SoHo; the lessons are inspired by the authors’ observations of SoHo, but hold true for any cityscape.

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