Description:
"Thomas Jefferson may have deemed classical forms to be ideally suited to the expression of American democracy, but in the Federal Republic of Germany these same forms often bring out a response that is almost phobic," writes Michael Wise in this book on the chronic controversy surrounding postwar German public architecture. A journalist who has covered Central Europe, Wise brings narrative flair and thoroughgoing research to this story of the politics, aesthetics, and historical implications of Germany's decision, following reunification, to move its government seat from Bonn to Berlin. Wise makes the tearing down of some old buildings ("Bye, Bye Clunker," read the headline in one Berlin newspaper as the Communist, white aluminum-clad Foreign Ministry fell to the wrecking balls) and the heated arguments over new designs into a fascinating page-turner. In scores of interviews, Wise also found many younger Germans who seemed inured to the "phobia" against classicism, so tainted by Albert Speer's grand designs for the Third Reich. Those in favor of building a replica of the old royal residence, last occupied by Kaiser Wilhelm II in l9l8, were slightly chilling in their naive, right-wing nostalgia, for example. Here is Annette Ahme, head of the Society for Historical Berlin: "Everyone, whether Left or Right, wants a beautiful city, apart from a few intellectuals who say we must continue to suffer from our Nazi-era sins and that these must remain visible." Wise's ultimate view, that "the Federal Republic has made an exemplary transition from totalitarian rule to democracy," is heartening, because it is believable. This is largely due to his detailed, fair-minded descriptions of the painstaking cultural processes of recent decades. --Peggy Moorman
|