Garden Culture of the Twentieth Century
Leberecht Migge (1881-1935) was one of the most innovative landscape architects of the early twentieth century. With work ranging from large urban parks to housing settlements with allotment gardens, he sought to create functional green spaces that would not only meet the environmental challenges of the industrial metropolis but also improve the social conditions of modern life. Migge's notion of "garden culture" captured the essence of the progressive reform movements of early twentieth-century Germany and yet was unique in proposing a comprehensive role for open space planning within this vision. The nationalistic rhetoric of Garden Culture of the Twentieth Century marks it as a political tract of the late Kaiserreich, and its deep influence within the Siedlung communities of the Weimar era attests to its lasting cultural impact. Perhaps the book's greatest significance today lies in Migge's emphasis on the socioeconomic benefits of urban agriculture, which prefigured both this important contemporary trend as well as other recent developments in green technology and infrastructure. Modern readers will find echoes of a progressivism that many have taken to be of only recent origin and will gain a better understanding of the social and economic history of pre-World War I Germany.
1115097690
Garden Culture of the Twentieth Century
Leberecht Migge (1881-1935) was one of the most innovative landscape architects of the early twentieth century. With work ranging from large urban parks to housing settlements with allotment gardens, he sought to create functional green spaces that would not only meet the environmental challenges of the industrial metropolis but also improve the social conditions of modern life. Migge's notion of "garden culture" captured the essence of the progressive reform movements of early twentieth-century Germany and yet was unique in proposing a comprehensive role for open space planning within this vision. The nationalistic rhetoric of Garden Culture of the Twentieth Century marks it as a political tract of the late Kaiserreich, and its deep influence within the Siedlung communities of the Weimar era attests to its lasting cultural impact. Perhaps the book's greatest significance today lies in Migge's emphasis on the socioeconomic benefits of urban agriculture, which prefigured both this important contemporary trend as well as other recent developments in green technology and infrastructure. Modern readers will find echoes of a progressivism that many have taken to be of only recent origin and will gain a better understanding of the social and economic history of pre-World War I Germany.
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Garden Culture of the Twentieth Century

Garden Culture of the Twentieth Century

by Leberecht Migge
Garden Culture of the Twentieth Century

Garden Culture of the Twentieth Century

by Leberecht Migge

Paperback

$39.95 
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Overview

Leberecht Migge (1881-1935) was one of the most innovative landscape architects of the early twentieth century. With work ranging from large urban parks to housing settlements with allotment gardens, he sought to create functional green spaces that would not only meet the environmental challenges of the industrial metropolis but also improve the social conditions of modern life. Migge's notion of "garden culture" captured the essence of the progressive reform movements of early twentieth-century Germany and yet was unique in proposing a comprehensive role for open space planning within this vision. The nationalistic rhetoric of Garden Culture of the Twentieth Century marks it as a political tract of the late Kaiserreich, and its deep influence within the Siedlung communities of the Weimar era attests to its lasting cultural impact. Perhaps the book's greatest significance today lies in Migge's emphasis on the socioeconomic benefits of urban agriculture, which prefigured both this important contemporary trend as well as other recent developments in green technology and infrastructure. Modern readers will find echoes of a progressivism that many have taken to be of only recent origin and will gain a better understanding of the social and economic history of pre-World War I Germany.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780884023883
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Publication date: 08/26/2013
Series: Ex Horto: Dumbarton Oaks Texts in Garden and Landscape Studies , #1
Pages: 242
Product dimensions: 8.00(w) x 10.00(h) x 0.65(d)

About the Author

David H. Haney is Lecturer in the Kent School of Architecture at the University of Kent.

Table of Contents

Foreword to the English Translation ix

Translator's Preface and Acknowledgments xiii

Translator's Introduction 1

Translation

Foreword 47

The Illustrations 51

I The Presence of the Garden in History 53

II Metropolis and Garden 57

A Private Gardens 58

B Public Gardens 71

C Garden-Like Forms 86

D Garden Cities 97

III House and Garden 103

A Planning 103

B Fundamental Design Principles 107

C Composition 111

IV People and the Garden 119

A The Expert 119

B The Architect 127

C The Layperson 129

V Vegetation 135

A The Visually Striking among Plants 135

B Applications 141

C Nuggets from Practice 157

VI Garden Structures 165

A Garden Furniture 165

B Arbors, Pavilions, and Pergolas 167

C Small-Scale Architecture in the Garden 172

D Garden Sculpture 174

VII Ways Toward New Garden Art 179

A Ach, We Have No Art! 179

B Art and Nature in the Garden 181

C Garden Types 184

D Garden Art Nevertheless? 189

VIII The German Garden 191

A Social Gardens 191

B The National Economy and Gardening 192

Tables 203

Appendices 209

List of Plant Names in Garden Culture of the Twentieth Century 219

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