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× Profit over Peace in Western Sahara // How commercial interests undermine self-determination in the last colony in Africa Profit over Peace in Western Sahara 10.00
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× Against the Anthropocene Against the Anthropocene 18.00
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× Art Always Has Its Consequences Art Always Has Its Consequences 18.00
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× The Changing Constitution of the Present The Changing Constitution of the Present 20.00
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× Canvases and Careers Today // Criticism and Its Markets Canvases and Careers Today 15.00
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× We Are Here, But Is It Now?  // (The Submarine Horizons of Contemporaneity) We Are Here, But Is It Now? 4.00
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× Hystericizing Germany // Fassbinder, Alexanderplatz Hystericizing Germany 8.00
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Subtotal 93.00
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Total 100.90 (includes 8.34 VAT)
2009, English/German
17×24 cm, 216 pages, 10 color and numerous b/w ill., softcover
ISBN 978-1-933128-60-3
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The intervention at Track 17 at Berlin-Grunewald station, a work by architects Nikolaus Hirsch, Wolfgang Lorch, and Andrea Wandel on the site of the deportations from Berlin between 1941 and 1945, is an attempt that aims at a structural connection between memory and oblivion. Referring to Alois Riegl’s (the founder of the “Modern Cult of Monuments”) differentiation between the specific, highly controlled documentary value, and the generic, always changing “age value,” the authors introduce a strategy that negotiates between stable and instable parameters: presumably permanent data, shifting vegetal successions, material durations and decay. This approach investigates whether it is possible to build ambivalence or even doubt into a monument. Thus, the uncertain status of the material memory becomes the focus of the intervention at Track 17.


The editors’ work includes the Dresden Synagogue, the Hinzert Document Center, a high-rise building in the geopolitical hotspot of Tbilisi (Georgia), and the highly debated Archeological Zone / Jewish Museum in Cologne.