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- catalog alternative "Arkitektur och ideologi i stalintidens Östeuropa. English".
- catalog contributor b3775007.
- catalog coverage "Europe, Eastern Politics and government 1945-1989.".
- catalog created "c1992.".
- catalog date "1992".
- catalog date "c1992.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "c1992.".
- catalog description "I. The Early Postwar Period. From the end of World War II to the Cold War. Reconstruction and new buildings -- II. The Cold War. From 1949 to the mid-1950s. Iconography, rhetoric, and the cult of Stalin -- III. The Example of the Soviet Union: Socialist Realism. Basic architectural concepts. The breakthrough of Socialist Realism in the Soviet Union. Causes and implications. Victory architecture of the 1940s -- IV. Realization of the Example in the People's Democracies. How the example was transmitted. Realization, country by country. The ideological context -- a newspaper article from 1952. The Soviet Union in 1932 versus the people's democracies in 1949 -- V. Socialist Content. The great construction projects of Communism. Concern for mankind. Ostentation and monumentality -- VI. National Form. DDR, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria. National form: practice and implications -- ".
- catalog description "VII. Monumental Buildings in the Capital Cities. Stalinallee in East Berlin. The Palace of Culture in Warsaw. Casa Scinteii in Bucharest. The new center of Sofia -- VIII. The First Socialist Cities. Stalinstadt. Nowa Huta. Sztalinvaros. Dimitrovgrad. The new cities: a glimpse of the future -- IX. The Logic of the Situation: Eight Biographical Sketches. Karel Teige and Jiri Kroha. Jozsef Fischer and Mate Major. Szymon Syrkus and Bohdan Pniewski. Hermann Henselmann and Kurt Liebknecht. The architects: aesthetic and ideology -- X. Four Political Works of Art. Pass me a brick -- building as a symbol. Young bricklayer of Stalinallee -- "the typical" in art. The Stalin Monument in Budapest -- damnatio memoriae I. The Stalin Monument in Prague -- damnatio memoriae II. The iconography of pictorial art -- XI. Thaw and De-Stalinization. From the death of Stalin till the end of the 1950s. The deescalation and abolition of Socialist Realism -- ".
- catalog description "XII. How the Other Side Built: Interbau in West Berlin -- Architecture and Ideology: Discussion and Conclusion -- Three comparisons -- Alternative interpretations -- The negative choice.".
- catalog extent "viii, 285 p. :".
- catalog hasFormat "Architecture and ideology in Eastern Europe during the Stalin era.".
- catalog identifier "0262011301".
- catalog isFormatOf "Architecture and ideology in Eastern Europe during the Stalin era.".
- catalog issued "1992".
- catalog issued "c1992.".
- catalog language "eng swe".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "New York : Architectural History Foundation ; Cambridge, Mass. : MIT Press,".
- catalog relation "Architecture and ideology in Eastern Europe during the Stalin era.".
- catalog spatial "Europe, Eastern Politics and government 1945-1989.".
- catalog spatial "Europe, Eastern".
- catalog spatial "Europe, Eastern.".
- catalog subject "720/.943/09045 20".
- catalog subject "Architecture Europe, Eastern History 20th century.".
- catalog subject "Architecture Europe, Eastern.".
- catalog subject "Architecture and state Europe, Eastern.".
- catalog subject "Architecture, Modern 20th century Europe, Eastern.".
- catalog subject "NA958 .A4713 1992".
- catalog subject "Socialist realism and architecture Europe, Eastern.".
- catalog tableOfContents "I. The Early Postwar Period. From the end of World War II to the Cold War. Reconstruction and new buildings -- II. The Cold War. From 1949 to the mid-1950s. Iconography, rhetoric, and the cult of Stalin -- III. The Example of the Soviet Union: Socialist Realism. Basic architectural concepts. The breakthrough of Socialist Realism in the Soviet Union. Causes and implications. Victory architecture of the 1940s -- IV. Realization of the Example in the People's Democracies. How the example was transmitted. Realization, country by country. The ideological context -- a newspaper article from 1952. The Soviet Union in 1932 versus the people's democracies in 1949 -- V. Socialist Content. The great construction projects of Communism. Concern for mankind. Ostentation and monumentality -- VI. National Form. DDR, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria. National form: practice and implications -- ".
- catalog tableOfContents "VII. Monumental Buildings in the Capital Cities. Stalinallee in East Berlin. The Palace of Culture in Warsaw. Casa Scinteii in Bucharest. The new center of Sofia -- VIII. The First Socialist Cities. Stalinstadt. Nowa Huta. Sztalinvaros. Dimitrovgrad. The new cities: a glimpse of the future -- IX. The Logic of the Situation: Eight Biographical Sketches. Karel Teige and Jiri Kroha. Jozsef Fischer and Mate Major. Szymon Syrkus and Bohdan Pniewski. Hermann Henselmann and Kurt Liebknecht. The architects: aesthetic and ideology -- X. Four Political Works of Art. Pass me a brick -- building as a symbol. Young bricklayer of Stalinallee -- "the typical" in art. The Stalin Monument in Budapest -- damnatio memoriae I. The Stalin Monument in Prague -- damnatio memoriae II. The iconography of pictorial art -- XI. Thaw and De-Stalinization. From the death of Stalin till the end of the 1950s. The deescalation and abolition of Socialist Realism -- ".
- catalog tableOfContents "XII. How the Other Side Built: Interbau in West Berlin -- Architecture and Ideology: Discussion and Conclusion -- Three comparisons -- Alternative interpretations -- The negative choice.".
- catalog title "Architecture and ideology in Eastern Europe during the Stalin era : an aspect of Cold War history / Anders Åman.".
- catalog title "Arkitektur och ideologi i stalintidens Östeuropa. English".
- catalog type "History. fast".
- catalog type "text".