Owen Hatherley: 10 books

Book cover of Trans-Europe Express

Trans-Europe Express

Tours of a Lost Continent

by Owen Hatherley
Language: English
Release Date: June 7, 2018

'A scathing, lively and timely look at the "European city", from one of our most provocative voices on culture and architecture today' Owen Jones A searching, timely account of the condition of contemporary Europe, told through the landscapes of its cities Over the past twenty...
Book cover of A New Kind of Bleak

A New Kind of Bleak

Journeys through Urban Britain

by Owen Hatherley
Language: English
Release Date: July 31, 2012

In A Guide to the New Ruins of Great Britain, Owen Hatherley skewered New Labour’s architectural legacy in all its witless swagger. Now, in the year of the Diamond Jubilee and the London Olympics, he sets out to describe what the Coalition’s altogether different approach to economic mismanagement...
Book cover of The Adventures of Owen Hatherley In The Post-Soviet Space
by Owen Hatherley
Language: English
Release Date: November 13, 2018

Nearly thirty years after the fall of the USSR, the word "Soviet" should be as meaningless by now as "Hapsburg" or "Hohenzollern". Strangely, though, it endures, as places both inside and outside the former Soviet Union define themselves for or against what happened when...
Book cover of The Ministry of Nostalgia

The Ministry of Nostalgia

Consuming Austerity

by Owen Hatherley
Language: English
Release Date: February 9, 2016

Why should we have to “Keep Calm and Carry On”? In this brilliant polemical rampage, Owen Hatherley shows how our past is being resold in order to defend the indefensible. From the marketing of a “make do and mend” aesthetic to the growing nostalgia for a utopian past that never existed,...
Book cover of Militant Modernism
by Owen Hatherley
Language: English
Release Date: April 24, 2009

Militant Modernism is a defence against Modernism's many detractors. It looks at design, film and architecture - especially architecture — and pursues the notion of an evolved modernism that simply refuses to stop being necessary. Owen Hatherley gives us new ways to look at what we thought was familiar...
Book cover of Landscapes of Communism

Landscapes of Communism

A History Through Buildings

by Owen Hatherley
Language: English
Release Date: March 1, 2016

When communism took power in Eastern Europe it remade cities in its own image, transforming everyday life and creating sweeping boulevards and vast, epic housing estates in an emphatic declaration of a noncapitalist idea. The regimes that built them are now dead and long gone, but from Warsaw to Berlin,...
Book cover of A Guide to the New Ruins of Great Britain
by Owen Hatherley
Language: English
Release Date: July 1, 2011

Back in 1997, New Labour came to power amid much talk of regenerating the inner cities left to rot under successive Conservative governments. Over the next decade, British cities became the laboratories of the new enterprise economy: glowing monuments to finance, property speculation, and the service...
Book cover of Across the plaza. The public voids of the post-soviet city
by Owen Hatherley
Language: English
Release Date: February 10, 2012

The vast, proverbially windswept plazas built under "really existing socialism" from the 1920s to the 1980s are widely considered to be useless spaces, designed to intimidate or at least impress. Yet if they are only of use to those in power, why is it they have been used so successfully in protest?...
Book cover of The Chaplin Machine

The Chaplin Machine

Slapstick, Fordism and the Communist Avant-Garde

by Owen Hatherley
Language: English
Release Date: May 20, 2016

Could Buster Keaton have starred in Battleship Potemkin? Did Trotsky plan to write the great Soviet comedy? And why did Lenin love circus clowns? The Chaplin Machine reveals the lighter side of the Communist avant-garde and, in particular, its unlikely passion for American...
Book cover of Uncommon
by Owen Hatherley
Language: English
Release Date: June 16, 2011

If we remember them at all, the Sheffield pop group Pulp are remembered for jolly class warfare ditty 'Common People', for the celebrity of their interestingly-named frontman, for the latter waving his arse at Michael Jackson at the Brit awards, for being part of a non-movement called 'Britpop', and...
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