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The Ruin Dwellers

Progress and Its Discontents in the West German Counterculture

The Ruin Dwellers

Progress and Its Discontents in the West German Counterculture

Traces the shifting dynamics within leftist activism in 1970s and ’80s Europe and its experiments in art, life, and politics.

The Ruin Dwellers takes readers into the urban spaces of youth revolts during the 1970s and 80s in West Germany and elsewhere in western and central Europe. Whereas earlier generations of leftist activists were primarily oriented toward the utopian future, participants in the youth movements of the 1970s and 80s developed a more complex set of temporal practices that sought to scramble the borders between the past, present, and future.
 
Examining a rich corpus of radical texts and practices, historian Jake P. Smith shows that squatters and their leftist allies in this period engaged in social, cultural, and aesthetic experiments with modes of autonomous living. Smith brings to life the real and imagined landscapes conjured in squatted houses and street protests; in art, dress, music, graffiti, and film; and in philosophical, poetic, and political texts. In so doing, he offers an eye-opening look at anarchic world-making practices that found new ways of imagining an emancipated future through inhabiting the fractured past.

272 pages | 20 halftones | 6 x 9 | © 2025

History: European History, General History, Urban History

Reviews

“This excellent, important book revises the conventional wisdom that the postrevolutionary loss of a future perspective, coupled with the ‘information overload’ brought about by technology’s immediacy, has been the left’s undoing. As Smith carefully shows, by discovering new spaces in the postwar landscape, leftists of the 1970s and 80s used the past—its literal ruins—to remake and open the world.”

Monica Black, University of Tennessee, Knoxville

Table of Contents

Introduction
1. The Allure of Progress in Postwar Germany
2. The Countercultural “Off-Modern”
3. The Youth Revolts of 1980–81 and the Radical Potential of the Present
4. Perpetual Motion: Ritualization and Rebirth in the 1980s
5. Insurgent Dwelling and the Cultivation of Place in Hamburg’s Hafenstraße
6. Carnival Time and Creative Destruction in the New Berlin
Epilogue

Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index

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