1st Edition

Building the State: Architecture, Politics, and State Formation in Postwar Central Europe

By Virag Molnar Copyright 2013

    The built environment of former socialist countries is often deemed uniform and drab, an apt reflection of a repressive regime. Building the State peeks behind the grey façade to reveal a colourful struggle over competing meanings of the nation, Europe, modernity and the past in a divided continent.

    Examining how social change is closely intertwined with transformations of the built environment, this volume focuses on the relationship between architecture and state politics in postwar Central Europe using examples from Hungary and Germany. Built around four case studies, the book traces how architecture was politically mobilized in the service of social change, first in socialist modernization programs and then in the postsocialist transition.

    Building the State does not only offer a comprehensive survey of the diverse political uses of architecture in postwar Central Europe but is the first book to explore how transformations of the built environment can offer a lens into broader processes of state formation and social change.

    1. Introduction  2. Building Socialism on National Traditions: Socialist Realism and Postwar Urban Reconstruction  3. Prefabricating Modernity: Mass Housing and its Discontents  4. Questioning Modernity: Western or Vernacular?  5. The Traditional "European City" in The Global Age: Rebuilding Post-Wall Berlin  6. Conclusion  Bibliography  Appendix A

    Biography

    Virág Molnár is Assistant Professor of Sociology at the New School for Social Research in New York. She holds a Ph.D. in Sociology from Princeton University and her work focuses on the politics of the built environment and urban culture.

    "Building the State importantly demonstrates how architecture and urbanism construct political objectives by other means. In charting the changing roles and evolving self-identity of the architectural profession in two key parts of Central Europe between 1945 and 2000, Virág Molnár adroitly reveals the complex dialogue among modernism, socialism and nationalism."

    Lawrence J. Vale, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA

    "This book offers a fresh perspective on the interaction between architecture and politics in East Germany and Hungary during state socialism and its aftermath. The author's approach, combining case studies and historical ethnography, is a delight for any reader, including architectural historians."

    Pál Ritoók, Hungarian Architecture Museum

    "In her book, Virág Molnár provides us with a sophisticated inquiry into architectural discourse in East Germany and Hungary during and after the period of state socialism. Molnár’s study takes on an important gap in literature on architecture under state socialism."

    Brigitte Le Normand, University of British Columbia, Canada. Planning Perspectives, April 2014

    "Molnar shows that whether material construction operates as a "cultural representation", a "cultural medium", or a set of strategies for change is not something that can be answered a priori. By focusing on the same general professional arena over a long period of time and across space, she shows how the "same" arena is transformed as it changes its relation to local and global power structures and histories–– how the material etching of the world emerges simultaneously as an almost "total social fact" and as a powerful way to shape future action. What emerges, then, is a nimble study of culture that truly takes its objects seriously—avoiding easy prefabricated answers, while showing how material culture is brought into action."

    Iddo Tavory, European Journal of Sociology, University of California, USA

    "Virág Molnár’s Building the State: Architecture, Politics, and State Formation in Post-War Central Europe explores the changing meanings of the built environment and its roles in the formulation of the socialist state in two former socialist countries, the German Democratic Republic and Hungary."

    Vladimir Kulić, Contemporary European History