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Marx, architecture and modernity
David Cunningham, Jon Goodbun School of Social Sciences, Humanities & Languages/
WAG Architecture; School of Architecture and Built
Environment; University of Westminster, London, UK
This paper reviews some current manifestations of Marxist thought within and around
architectural discourse, building on papers presented at a symposium held at the University
of Westminster in May, 2004.
Introduction
Although its obituaries continueto be popularly disse-
minated, Marxist thinking remains a significant intel-
lectual force within contemporary critical and
cultural theory, if not, so clearly, within mass politics.
Indeed, in many respects, it seems healthier, leaner
and more active in these areas than it has been for
some time, renewed both by contemporary
discourses surrounding globalisation and the anti-
capitalist movement, and by various recent theoretical
developments from the UK and North America to
continental Europe and South America. More often
than not such activity has been fed by a belated
return to the writings of Marx himself. One thinks of
Antonio Negri’s seminal post-workerist readings of
the Grundrisse, David Harvey’s revisiting of the 1848
Manifesto, or the recent resurrection of debates
surrounding the Hegelian character of Marx’s
Capital, and its implications for contemporary philos-
ophy and social theory.
1
Equally, one thinks of Jacques
Derrida’s influential and (at its time of writing)
untimely intervention in Spectres of Marx, or of
Gilles Deleuze who died before completing a book
he intended to call Grandeur de Marx. At the same
time, Marx is increasingly proclaimed, as much on
the right as on the left, to be the great prophet of
contemporary globalisation; a prophet who, once
stripped of his articulation of an alternative (commu-
nist) future uncoiling itself from within the very struc-
tures of the capitalist present, can be perversely
‘accepted by leading theorists of the American
business class’ as the one thinker who actually
reveals ‘the true nature of capitalism’.
2
While there
is much about this that should (and does) disquiet
us—as the production of a ‘Marx’ devoid of all revolu-
tionary fervour—it indicates why the writings of a
thinker that Foucault once described as the author
of an entire ‘discourse’ should appear, yet again, to
have become the terrain upon which a series of
current debates are destined to be fought out.
At the very least, what the contemporary
ideologues of globalisation recognise is that Marx
matters today because he was, perhaps, the
thinker, not only of nineteenth-century capitalism,
but of ‘capitalism in itself’. As one commentator
puts it, the ‘actuality’ of das Kapital is ‘that of its
object . . . capital itself—an insatiable vampire and
fetish-automaton now more invasive than ever’.
3
With the dramatic implosion of ‘historical commun-
ism’ in Eastern Europe, and the accelerated absorp-
tion of non-Western societies into the resurgent
regimes of capital accumulation that it helped to
generate, Marx’s analyses of ‘capitalism in itself’
are thus of increasing, not decreasing, relevance;
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#2006 The Journal of Architecture 1360–2365 DOI: 10.1080/13602360600787066
although accompanying this is a demand that they
not become petrified again in the suffocating grip
of doctrinal ‘orthodoxy’. A return to Marx today is
not, or should not be, a return to the Same and
the already given.
4
Still, if ‘capital obviously does
not operate in the way it did in the nineteenth
century . . . yet it operates’. And, whatever its flaws
(which remain open to debate), we do not have a
better starting point for its critical analysis than
Marx.
5
It was with this in mind that we organised, in May,
2004, a small one-day colloquium at the University
of Westminster in London which sought to bring
some of these transdisciplinary debates to bear
upon the discipline of architecture; a colloquium,
and a general idea, that appears to have generated
some interest and, hence, seems worth recounting
and exploring further here.
6
In inviting various
people to contribute to this discussion, we were
guided by a concern to engage the implications for
architectural knowledge of what appear to us to
be three particularly significant (and, in one sense,
‘heretical’) developments of Marxian thought, each
of which possesses considerable contemporary
resonance.
The first of these, and the most directly architec-
tural, is the body of work written by Manfredo
Tafuri and the Venice School, and its ongoing disse-
mination and extension through the work of Anglo-
phone theorists such as Frederic Jameson. Although
Tafuri’s work continues, slowly, to gain respect
across the broader field of cultural studies, architec-
tural theory has, paradoxically, largely avoided
confronting and developing this difficult legacy;
perhaps precisely because of the difficult questions
it raises for the architectural profession itself. Justi-
fied by simplistic accusations of ‘structural pessi-
mism’ and lack of a ‘specific methodology for
architectural activity’, neglect looks increasingly
like mere evasion of some uncomfortable issues.
7
Anthony Vidler and Gail Day’s recent critical engage-
ments present an honourable exception, and, as
they demonstrated in their papers at the colloquium,
both are, not coincidentally, distinguished by an
attention to the properly Marxist dimensions of
Tafuri’s oeuvre.
By contrast to Tafuri’s relative neglect, the enor-
mity of both Walter Benjamin’s and Henri Lefebvre’s
respective contributions to thinking about spatial
culture has at least succeeded in achieving wide-
spread recognition, if at times superficially, in archi-
tectural and urbanist circles. The recent
interventions of Marxist or ‘post-Marxist’ urbanists
and geographers (such as Harvey and Castells),
who have been inspired by Lefebvre in particular, is
one of the most promising of recent developments.
In the case of Benjamin, it is in the potential he
provides for something like a phenomenological
account of urban experience that his influence has
been perhaps most profoundly felt, generating the
groundwork for a vast array of contemporary theor-
etical projects. Together, although they in fact
represent quite distinct legacies, it’s fair to say that
Benjamin and Lefebvre have been the guiding theor-
etical lights for an elaboration of a specifically
‘culturalist’ (as opposed to sociological-empirical)
approach to the urban
8
that has had an almost
unprecedented impact upon architectural history
and theory in recent times. It was from this position
that, in their respective papers at the colloquium,
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D. Cunningham,
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Iain Borden outlined a possible Marxian phenomen-
ology grounded in a Lefebvrian rhythm-analysis of
everyday space, and Jane Rendell attempted to
counsel the ‘unhappy marriage’ of Marxism and
feminism.
The third strand we identified in the colloquium,
which to some degree mediates the concerns of
the others, is the recent (often broadly philosophical)
reviews of Marxist thought developed around the
histories and theories of the avant-garde, taking
up the Critical Theory of the Frankfurt School as
well as the artistic practices of Dada, Surrealism,
Situationism, and their heirs.
9
Peter Osborne’s writ-
ings on the ‘architectural turn’ in post-conceptual
art practice and culture would be one key instance
of this, emphasising the socio-political underpin-
nings of this ‘turn’, as a desired engagement with
art’s institutional structuring and its opening out
on to the city beyond.
10
More broadly, the question
of the avant-garde raises here the issue of what
role might still be played, today, by imaginings of
a qualitatively different non-capitalist future at a
moment when, as Tafuri unceasingly reminds us,
such imaginings may simply provide ideological
and aesthetic cover for the ongoing reproduction
of capitalism itself.
11
If each of these strands inherits a Marxian
discourse in some way, such inheritance is never a
simple process. A legacy is neither automatic nor
homogeneous, and true inheritance is always, in
some part of itself, a kind of betrayal, as it must be
to be true at all. We do not wish here, therefore,
to speak for the participants in the discussion
we have sought to initiate, or to corral them into
a unified theory of ‘Marx, architecture and
modernity’. Rather we want to respond, often obli-
quely, to the questions they have helped us to articu-
late, and, in doing so, to offer the reader some broad
account of just a few of the issues that might be at
stake in all this.
Marx:Architecture
What then would constitute the relationship
between the terms ‘Marx’ and ‘Architecture’?
Indeed, what do we want to signify by ‘Marx’?
We have, clearly, the historical nineteenth-century
figure Karl Marx and his known writings (both the
published texts and the notebooks). And it is clear
from these that Marx did not set out anything like
a coherent Marxist theory of architecture upon
which we could draw. Nor, for that matter, did he
set out a coherent Marxist theory of either aesthetics
or space (a point that will be returned to). Yet, his
texts are full of a range of suggestive architectural,
spatial and bodily references.
Engels famously described Marx’s project as
coming out of the synthesis of three strands of
European thought: economics (British), politics
(French), and philosophy (German). Architectural
knowledge at times must deal with similar synth-
eses, and so it is perhaps not surprising that it pro-
vides some fertile material for Marx. It is worth
setting out what some of this material is. There are
first the texts that deal directly with an urban (and,
thus, implicitly architectural) subject matter, such
as the section on the country and the city in the
German Ideology of 1845, and in the 1848 Manifesto,
or the constant references and comments on the
processes and effects of industrial urbanisation.
There are also texts on housing and urbanism by
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Marx’s collaborator Engels. More generally, and
significantly for our concerns, there is a sense in
which, for Marx, the basic productive ‘impulses’ of
the ‘architectural’ and the ‘urban’ are understood
as co-originary with the human itself. Or at least,
human consciousness is for his ‘philosophy’, as he
began to develop it from the early 1840s, simul-
taneously produced through the act of producing
an environment; an environment, a worked
matter, which is understood as both alienated and
alienating consciousness.
12
Marx must thus be
understood as both, first, a theorist of human pro-
duction generally, and, second, a theorist of capital-
ist production in particular. He provides the
theoretical foundations for his own relevance, as it
were, by initially theorising how the human is pro-
duced, and then looking at our particular historical
form of that production.
It would be interesting to relate this, for example,
to the recent arguments of Edward Soja who,
drawing on the archaeological research of Kathleen
Kenyon and James Mellaart, asserts the existence of
what he calls a First Urban Revolution, essentially
co-terminous with human society as such, beginning
in Southwest Asia over 10,000 years ago—the
development of pre-agricultural urban settlements
of hunters, gatherers and traders that he identifies
with the ‘spatially specific’ urban forms to be
found at Jericho in the Jordan Valley and C¸ atal
Hu¨ yu¨ k in southern Anatolia. This inversion of the
usual historical narrative, in which the agricultural
‘revolution’ precedes the urban, has profound con-
sequences for rethinking any ‘natural-historical’
account of the human, and for the phenomenologi-
cal implications (to which we will return below) of
what Soja describes as a process, beginning ‘with
the body’, by which the human is produced
through a ‘complex relation with our surroundings’.
The social is, as Marx implicitly recognised, ‘always
at the same time intrinsically spatial.’
13
Expanding
the term ‘building’ to ‘city’ or ‘metropolis’, we can
understand, then, the workings of a broader dialec-
tic of architectural production, consciousness, alien-
ation and experience perpetually at work in Marx’s
writings (if somewhat marginalised in their develop-
ment). The discourse of Marx and the discourse
that emerged around space simultaneously co-
developed out of Young Hegelian preoccupations
with the relationship between matter and spirit.
These are thus texts that share concerns with
architectural thought, and which make his infiltra-
tion into architectural theory possible. A key
example would be from his early writings, in the
Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts, composed
in 1843–4.
14
Here Marx outlines what can be read
as something like a body-based materialist phenom-
enology of technology, located in the notion that
man ‘is affirmed in the objective world not only in
the act of thinking, but with all his senses’.
15
The
senses, Marx famously writes, have become ‘theore-
ticians in their immediate praxis . . . Apart from these
direct organs, social organs are therefore created in
the form of society ...[as] a mode of appropriation
of human life.’
16
For Marx, the (collective and ‘indi-
vidual’) subject is, as Etienne Balibar states, ‘nothing
other than practice which has already begun and
continues indefinitely.’
17
As this early ‘natural-
historical’ account would have it, the biological
species, therefore, only becomes human when it
begins to produce its own environment through
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Marx, architecture and
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D. Cunningham,
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social co-operation. In this sense what Marx means
by the economic is, most fundamentally, a
mediation between social and biological aspects.
Production is the source of a ‘universality’ which
makes the ‘whole of nature’ man’s ‘inorganic
body’.
18
Nature becomes, through technics, a pros-
thetic extension which defines the human itself, in
the sense that the human is intrinsically (rather
than merely secondarily) prosthetic. The technical
is, as Bernard Stiegler has insisted (thinking of both
Marx and Heidegger), more than a ‘tool’: it is a
condition of the invention of the human itself.
19
The significance of such an idea for an expanded
conception of architectural praxis, and of the histori-
cal logic of the urban, should be apparent.
Indebted, no doubt, to a certain German Roman-
tic tradition of aesthetic philosophy in general, and
spatial aesthetic theory in particular—which we
know Marx was reading, and continued to read,
throughout his life—texts such as this suggest
that, in its original formulations and sources, one
way of understanding the Marxist ‘synthesis’ of
economics, politics and philosophy would be
through the use of aesthetic structures in economic
and political formations. Thus in Marx’s later move
towards an apparently ‘purer’ economic focus, in
the Grundrisse and Capital, certain aesthetic
models can still be found at work both within the
analysis of the form of the commodity-object itself,
and within the concept of commodity fetishism.
20
In a sense, much of Benjamin’s most famous
work—probably without any direct influence from
Marx’s early writings—starts from here, although,
typically, its ‘roots’ in Marxian thought tend to
be occluded by many of his most enthusiastic
proponents in contemporary cultural and urban
studies. And, again, this is not without direct rel-
evance to architectural questions. In a famous
passage towards the end of ‘The Work of Art in
the Age of Mechanical Reproduction’, Benjamin
writes:
Buildings have been man’s companions since
primeval times. Many art forms have developed
and perished . . . [But] architecture has never
been idle. Its history is more ancient than that of
any art, and its claim to being a living force has
significance in every attempt to comprehend the
relationship of the masses to art . . . [The] mode
of appropriation, developed with reference to
architecture, in certain circumstances acquires
canonical value. For the tasks which face the
human apparatus of perception at the turning
points of history cannot be solved by optical
means, that is, by contemplation, alone. They
are mastered gradually by habit.
21
In this conception—that the ‘mode of human sense
perception changes with humanity’s entire mode of
existence. . . determined not only by nature but by
historical circumstances as well’—we have the basis
for an entire Marxian-phenomenological account of
the architectural as spatial practice.
If the terms of phenomenology can seem dubious
in contemporary architectural theory, and unlikely to
intersect with Marxist thought, it is, no doubt,
because of the ethico-sentimental conservatism
which has tended to define such thinking in recent
decades. Typically, architectural phenomenologies,
such as those of Christian Norberg Schultz, Dalibor
Veseley, or Juhani Pallasmaa (to name some of
the more successful) have all tended in various
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ways problematically to essentialise and dehistoricise
the experiencing body, emphasising the supposedly
‘timeless’ and ‘natural’, confusing philosophical
methods and polemical ambitions. Whilst one
might sympathise with the desires to ameliorate
the alienating effects of spectacle and rampant
consumer capitalism that often seem to animate
these discourses, one must maintain the demand
for a sober historical phenomenology that accounts
for the body’s ever-shifting interaction with its
environment; an interaction which has undergone
fundamental and irreversible change in the ‘second
nature’ of capitalist modernity. This is not to deny
that there are components of our bodies and
environments that undergo very slow change, and
a sophisticated Marxian phenomenology might
unravel the simultaneous and competing spatialities
and temporalities at work in our experiencing.
Indeed it is perhaps in the nearly timeless, and
therefore, at one level, effectively ‘pre-capitalist’,
slow rhythms of the body, that we might find the
basis for some forms of future resistance to the
commodification of our bodies and environments.
Yet this does not efface the need for a properly
socio-historical account of our ‘complex relation
with our surroundings’.
At the same time, undoing the largely conserva-
tive determinations of phenomenology is often
hampered by the dominantly iconographic (rather
than properly spatial) model which now drives,
inside and outside of the academy, a contemporary
understanding of architectural meaning; and
which requires us to revise somewhat Benjamin’s
assertions regarding architecture’s non-auratic char-
acter. This itself takes place in a cultural context in
which a select group of architects are increasingly
fe
ˆted as the great figures of artistic genius and
power in our time. Intensifying what Tafuri saw as
the irreversible reduction of its socially transforma-
tive ambitions to a ‘form without utopia. . . to
sublime uselessness’,
22
such uselessness has itself,
paradoxically if inevitably, proved to be of great
ideological use to the contemporary imperatives
of capital accumulation. The contemporary ‘drama’
of architecture thus appears, dominantly, as one of
spectacle and brand image. As against this, the
essential Marxist task should become one of recon-
ceiving a genuinely modernist conception of spatial
practice as the condition for architectural knowl-
edge, that is, the production of a phenomenological
account of the spatio-temporal forms through
which the distinctive social relationships of capitalist
modernity are reproduced and extended. While
architecture cannot itself overcome such relation-
ships, in its reflection upon them it can at least
promote a lucid awareness of their conditions, and
an understanding of the new forms of subjective
experience produced. This would seem to us to be
the basis for a broadly Marxian analysis today.
Modernity
What about our third term then—modernity? How
might a ‘return’ to the writings of Marx inform our
specific understanding of architecture and moder-
nity, and of their interrelationship, at this point?
For Marshall Berman, famously, Marx and Engels’
1848 Communist Manifesto is an expression of
some of modernism’s ‘deepest insights [which], at
the same time, dramatises some of its deepest
inner contradictions’, both one of the classic texts
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Marx, architecture and
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D. Cunningham,
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of political ‘modernism’, and ‘the archetype of a
century of modernist manifestos and movements
to come.’
23
And, in the passage that provides the
title for Berman’s All That is Solid Melts Into Air,
we find a brilliant account of modernity by Marx
himself:
It [the bourgeoisie] has accomplished wonders
far surpassing Egyptian pyramids, Roman aque-
ducts, and Gothic cathedrals; it has conducted
expeditions that put into the shade all former Exo-
duses of nations and crusades. The bourgeoisie
cannot exist without constantly revolutionising
the instruments of production, and thereby the
relations of production, and with them the whole
relations of society. Conservation of old modes of
production in unaltered form, was, on the contrary,
the first condition of existence for all earlier
industrial classes. Constant revolutionising of
production, uninterrupted disturbance of all social
conditions, everlasting uncertainty and agitation
distinguish the bourgeoisie epoch from all earlier
ones. All fixed, fast frozen relations, with their
train of ancient and venerable prejudices and
opinions, are swept away, all new formed ones
become antiquated before they can ossify. All
that is solid melts into air, all that is holy is pro-
faned, and man is at last compelled to face with
sober senses, his real conditions of life, and his
relations with his kind. The need for a constantly
expanding market for its products chases the bour-
geoisie over the whole surface of the globe.It must
nestle everywhere, settle everywhere, establish
connections everywhere. [ . . . ] The bourgeoisie
has subjected the country to the rule of the
towns. It has created enormous cites, has greatly
increased the urban population as compared with
the rural, and thus rescued a considerable part of
the population from rural idiocy.
24
Noting the presence of architecture and the urban at
both ends of this very famous passage, we should
say something of what we understand by the
terms ‘modernity’ and ‘modernism’ in relation to
these paradigmatically spatial discourses.
For Berman, this passage describes—precisely in
phenomenological, as well as socio-economic
fashion (although the two cannot in fact be separated)
—the experience of modernity (Berman’s subtitle).
Modernity here embraces both what he terms mod-
ernisation—the general process of socio-economic
and technological development—and modernism—
the various cultural and/or ‘subjective’ responses to
this process of modernisation—and, to a degree
that Berman himself fails to bring out, modernity
articulates something of the shared spatio-temporal
form of both. As Osborne puts it, in what may
be regarded, in part, as a reading of the Marx
passage, modernity, in these terms, refers to some-
thing like a ‘culture of temporal abstraction’:
[Modernity] defines a distinctive structure of
historical experience. Nonetheless, the unity of
this structure notwithstanding, its concrete mean-
ings are subject to significant historical variation,
relative to the specific terms and boundaries of
the various fields of experience that are subjected
to its temporal logic, and to the specific modes of
negation that are employed. [ . . . ] ‘Modernity’ is
the name for an actually existing, or socially
realised, temporal formalism that is constitutive
of certain formations of subjectivity. It is in
this sense that it is a distinctively ‘cultural’
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category: the fundamental form of time-
consciousness in capitalist societies.
25
Modernism would, then, in turn, be the general
‘name’ for a cultural or subjective self-consciousness
about, and expression of, this temporal logic of
modernity, and of its dialectic of negation and
newness: a ‘constant revolutionising’ that inces-
santly negates all ‘fixed, fast frozen relations’. Artis-
tically, the modernist work is that which, in some
way, registers this non-identity of modernity and
tradition within itself, engaging the social logic of
capitalist modernity at the level of form.
All this is broadly well known and understood, and
Berman’s terms are ones that have often been
taken up in architectural theory over the last
decade or so, most recently by Hilde Heynen.
26
Yet
they need here to be reconnected to that social
logic of ‘capitalism itself’ if we are to draw out
their full significance; a reconnection which requires
a certain ‘return’ to Marx. Let us thus re-read the
Marx passage and note one of its other theoretical
‘dimensions’: ‘The need for a constantly expanding
market for its products chases the bourgeoisie over
the whole surface of the globe. It must nestle every-
where, settle everywhere, establish connections
everywhere.’ For Marx himself, the temporal
condition of modernity described by Osborne is,
then, simultaneously the production of (and may
be produced out of) new spatial relationships. That
is to say, modernity’s progressive intensification of
a temporal logic also entails a progressive negation
of certain historically-specific spatial logics and
relationships—most obviously, those associated
with ‘place’ as traditionally conceived in terms of
physical contiguity or belonging. As Marx writes in
the Grundrisse, in capitalist modernity there is a
sense in which ‘even spatial distance reduces itself
to time’: ‘While capital must on one side strive to
tear down every spatial barrier to intercourse, ie,
to exchange, and conquer the whole world for its
market, it strives on the other side to annihilate
this space with time.’
27
Thus, as the fundamental
form of time-consciousness within capitalist
society, modernity equally serves to constitute its
fundamental form of space-consciousness—the ulti-
mate horizon of a ‘connectivity’, of an ‘everywhere’,
of pure equi-valence.
We will not be the first to note that, although
Marx himself only implies the term, such a spatial
form and consciousness of connectivity takes,
among its most famous names, that of the metropo-
lis, which, for Simmel, was space as ‘dominated’ by
the money economy. As a system of connectivity, the
metropolis is formed, as Benjamin says in one of his
conversations with Brecht, by a ‘boundless maze of
indirect relationships, complex mutual dependencies
and compartmentations.’
28
The space of the metro-
polis is one made up of newly differentiated and
variegated flows of connection, where the individual
subject is increasingly dependent upon an ensemble
of rationalised and abstract mediations of social
relationships that resist understanding. Above all,
as modern form, the metropolis is a dynamic techni-
cal system of relationships or references—ie,
precisely what Marx calls a system of production—
which, in an historical sense, defines the very
nature of the human itself. In this sense, the metro-
polis might well be understood conceptually as the
spatial correlate, the material support, of the
culture (of temporal abstraction) of modernity in
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Marx, architecture and
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D. Cunningham,
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general.
29
Such a reading would, we think, follow
directly from the passage from the Manifesto. This
is implicit also in Berman, whose book is essentially
a compendium of urban experience (Paris,
St Petersburg, New York), but fails to be adequately
developed there at the conceptual level required.
At any rate, in these terms, what we understand
by modernism, in architecture, cannot thus be
reduced solely to its use of new technologies or
materials—glass, steel, reinforced concrete—nor to
its particular, diverse stylistic forms and rhetorics,
but, above all, must be understood through its ineli-
minable engagement with, and subjection to, the
spatial and temporal forms of the urban. Architec-
ture’s modern identity cannot be disentangled
from the larger social and spatial formations of
what Marx describes as a subjection of ‘the
country to the rule of the towns’. What Beatriz Colo-
mina says of Loos, that the ‘subject of [his] architec-
ture is the citizen of the metropolis, immersed in its
abstract relations’, is true in far more general
terms.
30
From nineteenth-century utopianism and
functionalism, through Le Corbusier and Mies, to
the likes of Koolhaas, and Herzog and de Meuron
today, it is the historical increase in ‘the urban
population as opposed to the rural’, one of the key
social logics of capitalist modernity, and the spatial
conditions of this historically new metropolitan life,
which is the always-implicit subject of modern archi-
tecture, and in relation to which it must irresistibly
articulate itself. Modernism is, in part, the question
of what such a life might mean, and of what
forms it can and should take.
Let us return to the ‘architectural’ examples in the
passage from the Communist Manifesto itself in
order to begin to unpack what we might understand
more specifically by architectural modernity here.
What exactly are the ‘wonders far surpassing
Egyptian pyramids, Roman aqueducts, and Gothic
cathedrals’ that capitalist modernity has ‘accom-
plished’? What is their nature and historical logic?
Capitalism has consistently visualised, symbolised
and articulated its most radical ideas and practices
through both real and imagined spatial develop-
ments and experiences, from the nineteenth-
century Great Exhibitions and urban infrastructures
to the contemporary resorts of Las Vegas. As well as
existing as commodities and spectacles, these and
almost all architectural objects are themselves a new
part of the production cycle. In a self-evident way a
factory building is part of the ‘means of production’.
Slightly less obvious but just as structural to pro-
duction are the airport, the high-speed railway
system, the shopping centre, and the home itself.
A principal manifestation of modernism in archi-
tecture is the communication of new processes of
modernisation. Most visibly this has been the
expression of new construction technologies and
materials. There is little need to repeat the canonic
histories of steel, glass and concrete architectural
expression over the last century, or to remind the
reader of the communicative potential of contem-
porary developments such as computer-aided
manufacturing or ecological design. However, pro-
cesses of modernisation have of course not been
restricted to construction, but would certainly
include organisational technologies and media tech-
nologies as well. Again, very familiar examples of
modernism constituted through what are conceived
of as processes of modernisation could be drawn
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from both its canonic and marginal histories.
In addition there are buildings that express cultural
or subjectively formed responses to the experience
of modernity—as well as buildings which might
self-consciously articulate, as ‘objects’, experiences
of modernity in themselves. In recent years, Peter
Eisenman for example has repeatedly stated that
his work confronts an alienated modern subjectivity
through the production of equally alienated ‘post-
humanist’ objects—using an argument more
convincingly employed by Michael Hayes in his
discussion of the historical avant garde.
31
Libeskind
too, in the Jewish Museum at least, has attempted
to use the physical experience of alienation
induced through the occupation of architectural form
as a method for intensifying narrative programme.
In a similar although more easily generalisable
way, Zaha Hadid has claimed to be involved in an
implicitly politicised ‘continuation of the unfinished
modern project’—and certainly in schemes like the
Leipzig BMW plant, it might be argued that the
formal abstractions employed by the architect
intensify the spatial experience of the modern
programme. Similar claims can be made about the
work of an increasing number of converging prac-
tices — UN Studio, Future Systems or Ushida
Findlay, to name just some of the usual suspects—
although, of course, any contemporary building is,
in principle, generative of such experience, as
indeed are the global-metropolitan spatial structures
that we occupy, from railway stations and airports to
the World Wide Web. As Marx indicated in 1848,
our historical form of space-consciousness does
indeed entail, with ever-increasing force, a compul-
sion to ‘establish connections everywhere’ as a
very condition of the spatial environment—a com-
pulsion which resonates in, for example, David
Greene’s Locally Available World Unseen Networks,
the ‘negative utopianism’ of Superstudio’s Continu-
ous Monument, or much of Koolhaas’s most import-
ant work; various visions of an architectural web
that might encompass the entire planet. Such
‘examples’ would clearly be near endless. The
crucial point here, however, is a more general and
structural one. What do we mean by the modernity
of ‘modern’ architecture itself? And how does this,
in turn, relate to modernity’s complex imbrication
with the logics of capitalist development? If, as
Osborne says, the ‘distance from traditional cultural
forms registered by radical temporal abstraction
does indeed associate it with a particular culture’—
the culture of capital—to what extent does this
imply that ‘the political content of any particular
modernism is in some way compromised by this affi-
nity, in advance’?
32
Such, as we shall see, is Tafuri’s
quintessentially Marxian question.
Production
For Marx, economic, political and social processes are
articulated through dialectical relationships between
three elements or moments: material productive
forces (or the means/mode of production), actual
social relationships (or the division of labour, owner-
ship and law) and spiritual consciousness (ideology:
something ‘between’ the freedom of total man and
alienated false consciousness). In taking up, and
exploring the potentialities of this thought, we
must reflect upon the objects, images, techniques
and ideas through which architecture produces: its
means of production. Similarly, we must consider
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what it produces. First, operating according to the
demands of development, it produces particular
material objects (buildings, environments, spectacle).
Second, it produces social practices associated with
both the production and consumption or occupation
of these specific material objects and technologies.
Third, it produces and reproduces itself as a dis-
course, as knowledge. These relationships undergo
constant change. The emergence for example of
computer-aided manufacturing technologies
(a means of production) are opening up important
new ways for architects to get involved in making
things (shifts in the division of labour).
Here we need to attend to specific histories
charting the divisions of mental and physical
labour within the production of spatial culture and
the built environment – among these, as Vidler
points out, the historical emergence of the
profession of architecture itself as ‘autonomous’,
as an ‘ideology’ in its own right:
[It is this ideology] which, in the first instance was
constructed in order to provide symbols in the
form of monuments, to authorise works of
public and private display, to provide aesthetic
cover for the ramified building activities of
capitalist society. [ . . . ] it has informed the
so-called ‘vandalism’ of the Revolutionary
period, the building of Haussmann’s monuments,
the experiments of Eiffel and Hennebique, the
construction of state capitals from New Delhi to
Chandigarh and Brasilia.
33
One could not find a more powerful exemplification
of capitalism’s accomplishment of ‘wonders far sur-
passing Egyptian pyramids, Roman aqueducts, and
Gothic cathedrals’, its constant ‘revolutionising [of]
the instruments of production, and thereby the
relations of production.’ Equally, however, as the
likes of Andrew Saint and Graham Ive have insisted,
actual spatial-social relationships must be under-
stood through specific histories and struggles
around, for example, land ownership and property
law in relation to which architectural ‘ideology’
comes to be defined. Unfortunately, such work still
remains marginalised.
In Lefebvre, who could offer something to such
studies, space itself is, of course, conceived as
commodity within capitalist modernity, but also as
something far more structural to the workings of
capital—as the spaces both through which capital
flows and which are themselves generated by
capital. Drawing, finally, on Tafuri in particular, and
in the light of Marx’s three ‘elements’ or
‘moments’, it is useful, therefore, to consider
briefly what might be described as the three distinct
tasks placed upon architectural knowledge in capi-
talist modernity. The first is to act as technicians of
spatial development. Under capitalism, this is pri-
marily the task of commodifying space. This is
what the vast majority of architects spend the vast
majority of their time involved in. The second task
is a ‘poetic’ or artistic one, and is to do with
somehow dealing with, expressing, intensifying or
ameliorating the spatial experience of modernity.
The third task is an utopian or avant-garde one, and
is to do with imagining alternative socio-spatial
futures. Although all three are always present in
each other to some degree, there have been
moments in the struggle over social space and its
modes of production where the third task, imagining
alternative socio-spatial futures, becomes an urgent
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part of defining the first task—the work to be done
by everyday technicians of spatial development.
Avant-garde and Utopia
The above is necessarily schematic, but such
moments of struggle and futural imagining would
include, most obviously, the first ten years in Russia
following the revolution, where the relative
positions of architects, the building industry and pol-
itical structures were rethought at the same time as
proposed and realised projects (from domestic
objects to buildings to entire urban regions) which
were at least partly embedded in these new social
relationships (the division of labour, ownership and
law). Other particular moments would include the
struggles over space in the Social Democratic cities
of Germany, as famously analysed by Tafuri, and
involving the activist tradition around Bruno Taut,
the expressionists and the Artist’s Soviet, Ernst
May, Martin Wagner, and others. Yet other
moments would include the worldwide struggles
over space that culminated in 1968, and which
define one set of parameters for Lefebvre’s work.
As well as projects like Constant’s (presently much
celebrated) New Babylon, one also thinks of the
(sometimes partly parodic or ironic) images of
alternative socio-spatial futures produced by
groups like Superstudio and Archigram: Benjaminian
wish-images that necessarily suggest, whether
through their endless megastructural audacity, or
through the simple abolition of the building com-
modity, a revision of the ways that social space is
owned, controlled and organised; an ‘utopian’
yearning for an alternate non-capitalist future that
might be constructed out of the present.
One of the many important problems raised by
Tafuri—somewhat against the grain of Benjamin’s
argument in this instance—is precisely to do with
the viability of these images of alternative socio-
spatial futures, which are potentially seen by him
as being dangerous ideological veils, if not rooted
in already-existing changes to social relationships.
That is, such positions can threaten to result only
in self-deception, obscuring real possibilities of
transforming reality and ultimately reinforcing the
relationships they seek to displace. Unable to
reflect upon the social conditions of its own ideo-
logical status, and the division of labour sustaining
it, the desire to overcome an institutional separation
from the social life-world, on the part of art or archi-
tecture themselves, can only ever result in a false
reconciliation under capitalism. Hence, for Tafuri,
the unavoidably tragic history of the Benjaminian
attempt to dissolve the auratic architectural object;
a dissolution which may have been the only possi-
bility of rendering itself ‘political’, but which—in
the face of the production cycle of a metropolis
that it could never control—found its ‘intrinsic
limits’ always ‘exposed’. Yet we should return the
‘architectural problems treated’ here, as Tafuri
himself demands, to the ‘theoretical context’ of
the ‘most advanced studies of Marxist thought’
which originally defined them.
Understanding of Tafuri’s writings within architec-
tural discourse has been blocked by a failure to
locate them in this way. Tafuri himself refers to the
journal Contropiano, in which the essay ‘Towards a
Critique of Architectural Ideology’ first appeared in
1969, and this title’s own evident allusion to Marx’s
Critique of Political Economy.
34
Read in this context
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Marx, architecture and
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D. Cunningham,
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it is clear that Tafuri’s notorious arguments actually
constitute the architectural elaboration of what can
be construed as a fairly classical Marxian critique of
a reformist, social democratic attempt to work
within existing socio-political institutions. At the
same time, the twentieth-century avant-garde
appears, for Tafuri, as something like a specifically
urban repetition of romanticism’s founding
naivete
´—its utopian linkage of aesthetic absolutism
to the work of politics—which itself repeats Marx’s
own strictures against nineteenth-century utopian
socialism (of the type propounded by Fourier).
Marx’s critique of utopianism, like Tafuri’s, always
rested upon its failure to yoke subjective transforma-
tive will to the real movement of social developments.
Yet this is not the whole story. The problem with
Berman’s justly renowned reading of the Communist
Manifesto is, for example, to be located in its ulti-
mate reduction of modernity and modernism,
against its own political intentions, to an essentially
celebratory dynamic identified completely with the
productive logic of capitalism itself; and there can
be little doubt that Tafuri risks such a reduction
also. Marx appears then as the great ‘poet’ of capi-
talist modernity, expressing and articulating its
defining experience; a conception which enticingly
prefigures his current reception as prophet of globa-
lisation. Not that this is unimportant, but restricted
to a kind of energetics of present upheaval—
above all, the intoxicating maelstrom of metropoli-
tan life—as it is in Berman in particular, it elides
that other temporal dynamic so key to Marx’s ‘mod-
ernism’: its futural impulse towards a non-capitalist
alternative. As such, before rushing to reiterate
the usual obituary notices for the avant-garde’s
‘stratagems’, whether broadly ‘artistic’ or ‘politi-
cal’—that failure of transformative intent which,
given its effective irresistibility, has never really
been a failure at all (for what is a failure when, on
its own terms, it could never have achieved
success)—it would be more fruitful to reflect upon
what is revealed by such ambitions themselves,
what they may tell us about the character of the
‘screen’ on which they are projected.
35
This would
be, more modestly, to seek to comprehend some-
thing of our contemporary situation through a
reflection upon its historical character, upon both
its ideological resistances and prefigurations. At
stake here would be, at the very least, the possibility
of architectural form and knowledge as an ongoing
medium for the expression of social contradiction;
an expression which, nonetheless, takes place
within, as Osborne says, ‘the horizon of their subla-
tion’, of a possible post-capitalist future, even if such
a future can apparently no longer be positively
projected by the work.
36
Adorno makes, in his one essay devoted to archi-
tecture, what is itself an exemplary Marxist point:
[Architectural work] is conditioned by a social
antagonism over which the greatest architecture
has no power: the same society which developed
human productive energies to unimaginable
proportions has chained them to conditions of
production imposed upon them. [ . . . ] This funda-
mental contradiction is most clearly visible in
architecture.
37
It is this visibility—its formal and phenomenological
registering of the disjunction between the (techno-
logical and social) possibilities and actuality of mod-
ernity—that gives architecture something of what
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Jameson calls its ‘emblematic significance’ (as in, for
example, post-conceptual art, as well as in contem-
porary cultural theory): ‘its immediacy to the social’,
the ‘seam it shares with the economic.’
38
For Tafuri,
we should remember, architecture is always, even at
its most silent, the site of communicative spatial
practices (perhaps especially at its most silent).
39
This relates today, most obviously and immedi-
ately, to architecture’s articulation of the internal
and external historically variable relationships that
it has to other cultural forms within the antagonistic
reality of the capitalist metropolis to whose
productive logics it is subjected—mass media,
communication technologies, advertising, commod-
ity design, signage, retail display, and so on—so as
critically to mediate and express existing forms of
social conflict and laceration within itself. At the
same time, however, such articulation takes place,
globally, in the context of what is a geographically
and culturally ‘uneven’ process of capitalist develop-
ment, as Marxist geographers like David Harvey
remind us. In this light, one of the weaknesses of
both Tafuri’s and Berman’s somewhat over-totalising
accounts of modernism becomes apparent. For
what Tafuri describes as a ‘prefiguration of an
abstract final moment of development coincident
with a global rationalisation’ is, as a developmental
process, by no means as monolithic or as absolute
(even in its abstraction) as he appears to have
supposed.
40
It is this that should, finally, cause us to complicate
the account of modernity with which we started
out. For, as Harvey points out, the description of
modernity in the Communist Manifesto itself is not
free of such problems, in its tendency to presume
that ‘capitalist industry and commodification’ will
lead to simple ‘homogenisation’. In fact, our global
capitalist modernity presents itself only as a differen-
tiated unity, in which such differences are them-
selves part of what capital accumulation and
‘market structures’ produce (not merely residues of
some pre-capitalist social form). In Harvey’s tentative
words: ‘There is a potentially dangerous estimation
within the Manifesto of the powers of capital ...
to mobilise geopolitically, within the overall
homogenisation achieved through wage labour
and market exchange’.
41
This ‘mobilisation’ and
‘differentiation’, in its dialectic with ‘homogenis-
ation’, clearly has considerable implications for the
potentialities of contemporary architectural practice
and knowledge; one which a moralistic and conser-
vative phenomenology, centred around simplistic
conceptions of ‘place’, is evidently unable to grasp.
The reverberations of Marx’s account of capitalist
modernity are extraordinary, and find their way into
architectural discourse at many varied points. Here,
for example, is Rem Koolhaas describing our
present moment: a ‘moment when the electronics
revolution seems about to melt all that is solid—to
eliminate all necessity for concentration and physical
embodiment.’
42
Whatever one thinks of his (always
provisional) ‘solutions’ to this ‘elimination’, perhaps
no contemporary architect has seemed so engaged
with the questions for architecture raised by what
Marx foresaw as capitalist modernity’s key spatial
consequences—the ‘annihilation of space [or,
rather, place] by time’, the horizon of a ‘connectivity’
of an ‘everywhere’. All ‘programmes’ thus ‘become
abstract’, Koolhaas writes, ‘inasmuch as now
they are no longer tied to a specific place or city,
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but fluctuate and gravitate opportunistically around
the point offering the highest number of connec-
tions.’
43
What does this mean for architectural pro-
duction? Murray Fraser has suggested that ‘the
tactics for Koolhaas in recent projects are those of
spatial transgression within different cultural con-
texts, as in the public right of way that is to snake
through the CCTV headquarters in Bejing, or
embedded spatial redundancy, as in the wastage
of retail volume in the Prada store at Rodeo Drive,
Los Angeles.’
44
Similarly, Hilde Heynen in her
reading of the Zeebrugge Sea Terminal project
understands Koolhaas as producing ‘a unique
locus so that this particular intersection within the
network is different from any other, giving character
to the nondescript, incoherent area that Zeebrugge
is at present.’
45
Yet such difference must now be
understood as part of that differentiated unity of
global capitalist modernity itself, in which, as we
have said, such differences are themselves part of
what capital accumulation and ‘market structures’
produce. These are not residues of some pre-capital-
ist social form, or reactive enclaves bulwarked
against the encroachment of modernity, but them-
selves part of a new spatial logic (of connectivity
and abstraction that exceeds the logic of place)
which it is Koolhaas’s great merit to have faced. It
is not clear that an essentially aesthetic terminology
of ‘character’, which precisely still seems linked to a
spatial logic of place, will really be able to grasp this.
The questions raised by all this are huge, and
beyond the scope of this essay, but, as a prolegome-
non to their further interrogation, it is in such a
context that we find ourselves ‘returning’ to Marx.
If ‘capitalism itself’ is, as we said at the outset,
now more invasive than ever, a sober confrontation
with its contemporary global reality is more urgent
than ever. It is as part of such a confrontation that
architecture might provide a critical knowledge,
with genuine transdisciplinary significance, which
could, at the very least, tell us something of its
social and spatial forms.
Notes and references
1. See, for example, the symposium on Christopher
J. Arthur’s crucial book, The New Dialectic and Marx’s
‘Capital’, in the journal Historical Materialism, vol. 13,
no. 2 (2005), pp. 27–221.
2. See David Murray and Mark Neocleous, ‘Marx Comes
First Again, and Loses’, Radical Philosophy, 134
(November/December, 2005), p. 60.
3. Daniel Bensaid, Marx for Our Times: Adventures and
Misadventures of a Critique, trs., Gregory Elliot
(London & New York, Verso, 2002), p. ix.
4. See Peter Osborne, How To Read Marx (London,
Granta, 2005), pp. 1–3.
5. Bensaid, Marx for Our Times,op. cit., p. xi.
6. The participants in the colloquium were: Iain Borden,
David Cunningham, Gail Day, Murray Fraser, Jon
Goodbun, Peter Osborne, Jane Rendell, Jeremy Till
and Anthony Vidler. Significant contributions were
also made from the floor by Adrian Forty, Michael
Edwards, Nic Clear and David Pinder, among others.
We would like to thank here Richard Difford, Ken
Paterson and Alex Warwick for their assistance and
support in organising the event, as well as all those
who attended.
7. Kate Nesbit, Introduction to Manfredo Tafuri, ‘Problems
in the Form of a Conclusion’, in Kate Nesbit, ed., Theo-
rizing a New Agenda for Architecture: An Anthology of
Architectural Theory, 1965– 1995 (New York, Princeton
Architectural Press, 1996), p. 361.
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8. See David Cunningham, ‘The Concept of the
Metropolis: Philosophy and Urban Form’, Radical
Philosophy, 133 (September/October, 2005), p. 13.
9. See, for some specific thoughts on this, Jon Goodbun
and David Cunningham, ‘On Surrealism and Architec-
ture’, in Samantha Hardingham, ed., The 1970s is
Here and Now,Architectural Design, vol. 75, no. 2
(March/April, 2005), pp. 66– 69.
10. Peter Osborne’s contribution to the colloquium, ‘Art as
Displaced Urbanism: Notes on a New Constructivism of
the Exhibition-Form’, appears in . . . With All Due
Intent, the catalogue for Manifesta 5, European
Biennial of Contemporary Art, Donostia-San Sebastien,
2004. See also, on this ‘architectural turn’, Peter
Osborne, ‘Non-Places and the Spaces of Art’, The
Journal of Architecture, vol. 6, no. 2 (Summer, 2001),
pp. 183–194.
11. This was the central issue that defined an issue of The
Journal of Architecture, vol. 6, no. 2 (Summer, 2001),
which we co-edited with Karin Jaschke under the
title ‘Returns of the Avant-Garde: Post-War Move-
ments’. For a gratifying response to some of the ques-
tions raised by this issue, see Esra Akcan, ‘Manfredo
Tafuri’s Theory of the Architectural Avant-Garde’, The
Journal of Architecture, vol. 7, no. 2 (Summer, 2002),
pp. 135–170.
12. We leave aside the question of whether or not the
conception of alienation that the early Marx inherits
from Hegel is any longer adequate to a theorisation
of what is at stake here.
13. See Edward W. Soja, Postmetropolis: Critical Studies
of Cities and Regions (Oxford, Blackwell, 2000),
pp. 19–49, 6, 8.
14. For a discussion of Marx’s EPM within the context of
nineteenth century German orientalism and spatial
aesthetics, see Jon Goodbun, Marx Matters, in Katie
Lloyd Thomas, ed., Material Matters (London, Routle-
dge, 2006).
15. Karl Marx, Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts of
1844, in The Marx-Engels Reader, ed., Robert
C. Tucker (London & New York, W.W. Norton), p.89.
16. Ibid., p. 87.
17. Etienne Balibar, The Philosophy of Marx, trs., Chris
Turner (London, Verso, 1995), p. 25.
18. See Osborne, How to Read Marx,op. cit., pp. 37–9, 53.
19. See Bernard Stiegler, Technics and Time I: The Fault of
Epimetheus, trs., Richard Beardsworth (Stanford,
Stanford University Press, 1998). See also, on the
relationship of such technics to the city, Bernard
Stiegler, ‘Technics of Decision’, Angelaki, vol. 8, no. 2
(August, 2003), pp. 154–5.
20. One should be careful here, nonetheless, for what
Marx means by commodity fetishism, in Capital,
should not be confused with a ‘commodity aesthetics’
in the sense explored by someone like Wolfgang
Haug—what might be better described as consumer
fetishism. See Osborne, How to Read Marx,op. cit.,
pp. 11–14. Rather, commodity fetishism concerns
the social being of the commodity itself, in general,
in its ‘possession’ of exchange-value. This is essentially
abstract and, in itself, has, as Marx makes very clear,
nothing to do with the particular sensual, material
aspects of specific commodities, although it is no less
‘real’ for that.
21. Walter Benjamin, ‘The Work of Art in the Age of Mech-
anical Reproduction’, trs., Harry Zohn, in Illuminations
(London, Fontana, 1973), p. 233.
22. Manfredo Tafuri, Architecture and Utopia, trs., Barbara
Luigia La Penta (Cambridge, MA, MIT Press, 1976), p. ix.
23. Marshall Berman, All That is Solid Melts Into Air: The
Experience of Modernity (London and New York,
Verso, 1983), p. 89.
24. Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, The Communist Mani-
festo, trs., Samuel Moore (London, Penguin, 2002),
pp. 222–3, 224. See also Marshall Berman, All That
is Solid Melts Into Air, op. cit., p. 21.
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Marx, architecture and
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25. Peter Osborne, ‘Non-Places and the Spaces of Art’,
op. cit., p. 183. See also Peter Osborne, Philosophy in
Cultural Theory (London and New York, Routledge,
2000), pp. 63–77.
26. See Hilde Heynen, Architecture and Modernity: A
Critique (Cambridge, MA, MIT Press, 1999), p. 1.
27. Karl Marx, Grundrisse, trs., Martin Nicholaus
(Harmondsworth, Penguin, 1973), pp. 358, 359.
28. Walter Benjamin, ‘Conversations with Brecht’, trs.,
Stanley Mitchell, in Understanding Brecht (London,
New Left Books, 1973), p. 111.
29. See David Cunningham, ‘The Phenomenology of
Non-Dwelling’, Crossings, 7 (Fall, 2004).
30. BeatrizColomina, Privacy and Publicity:Modern Architec-
ture as Mass Media (Cambridge, MA, MIT Press, 1994).
31. See Michael Hayes, Modernism and the Post-Humanist
subject: The Architecture of Hannes Meyer and Ludwig
Hilberseimer (Cambridge, MA, MIT Press, 1992).
32. Peter Osborne, Philosophy in Cultural Theory,op. cit.,
p. 60.
33. Anthony Vidler, ‘Disenchanted History/Negative
Theories: Tafuri’s Dream Book’, unpublished paper
from the Westminster colloquium, ‘Marx, Architecture
and Modernity’, p. 1.
34. Tafuri, Architecture and Utopia,op. cit., pp. viii– ix. See
also Gail Day, ‘Strategies in the Metropolitan Merz’,
Radical Philosophy, 133 (September/October, 2005),
pp. 26–38. This latter article draws upon Day’s paper
delivered at the Westminster colloquium, ‘Marx,
Architecture and Modernity’.
35. Rem Koolhaas: ‘The city [is] always the screen on
which the avant-garde projects its ambitions, against
which the avant-garde prepares its (usually futile)
stratagems of substitutions.’ ‘Eno/abling Architecture’
in R. E. Somol, ed., Autonomy and Ideology: Position-
ing an Avant-Garde in America (New York, Monacelli
Press, 1997), p. 294.
36. Peter Osborne, ‘Remember the Future?’, pp. 74, 75.
37. Theodor W. Adorno, ‘Functionalism Today’, in Neil
Leach, ed., Rethinking Architecture: A Reader in
Cultural Theory (London & New York, Routledge,
1997), p. 16. For a more detailed reading of this
essay, see David Cunningham, ‘Architecture as
Critical Knowledge’, in Mark Dorrian, Murray Fraser,
Jonathan Hill and Jane Rendell, eds, Critical
Architecture (London and New York, Routledge,
2006), forthcoming.
38. Frederic Jameson, The Cultural Turn: Selected Writings
on the Postmodern, 1983–1998 (London & New York,
Verso, 1998), p. 163.
39. See Jon Goodbun, ‘Brand New Tafuri’, The Journal of
Architecture, vol. 6, no. 2 (Summer, 2001).
40. Tafuri, Architecture and Utopia,op. cit., p. 62.
41. David Harvey, Spaces of Capital: Towards a Critical
Geography (Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press,
2001), pp. 383–4.
42. Rem Koolhaas, S, M, L, XL (Ko
¨ln, Benedikt Taschen
Verlag, 1997), p. 606.
43. Ibid., p. 234.
44. Murray Fraser, ‘The Cultural Context of Critical Archi-
tecture’, The Journal of Architecture, vol. 10, no. 3
(2005), p. 320 (emphasis added).
45. Hilde Heynen, Architecture and Modernity, op. cit.,
p. 215.
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