Worker's Festive Spaces in the Weimar Republic: May Day and the Berlin Lustgarten   Cover Image
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Worker's Festive Spaces in the Weimar Republic: May Day and the Berlin Lustgarten
Worker's Festive Spaces in the Weimar Republic: May Day and the Berlin Lustgarten

Author(s): Alex Zukas
Subject(s): Philosophy
Published by: Zeta Books
Keywords: May Day; Lustgarten; Weimar Republic;

Summary/Abstract: May Day was the most popular holiday of the two major wings of the German labor movement, Social Democratic and Communist, during the Weimar Republic (1918-1933). While the political importance and ideological significance of May Day celebrations for the German labor movement have been extensively researched, its geographicity, the inherently spatialized and spatializing moment of lived experience, as well as the content of that geographicity have been relatively neglected. Examining working-class May Day celebrations in a specific built environment like the Lustgarten permits detailed consideration of the ways that the festive has involved spatializing and spatialized moments of lived experience which were part of the spatial reproduction of class relations and class experiences at the local level in Berlin in the Weimar Republic.

  • Issue Year: 2012
  • Issue No: Vol.4/1
  • Page Range: 48-78
  • Page Count: 31
  • Language: English