Berlin Manifesto
Culture Against Capital
by AZOUZ ZEUS MANACHOU
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About the Book
Are you someone who refuses to let culture be erased, repackaged, and sold as capital?
Do you believe that art belongs to those who dream without permission, and that cities should remain imperfect, shared, and alive?
If yes, then this book was written with you.
Berlin Manifesto: Culture Against Capital is a tribute to the unruly spirit that once occupied the cracks of Berlin. It is a journey into a city where abandoned buildings became community anchors, where art rose from ruin, and where resistance wasn’t an ideology but a way of living. This book asks what polite urbanism avoids: Who decides what is preserved? Who has the right to belong? And what becomes of a city when creativity is priced out of existence?
Inside these pages, discover the story of Berlin’s squatting movements from 1969 to 2016 and how they transformed vacant structures into spaces of political defiance, cultural experimentation, and collective life. Through the experiences of artists, activists, anarchists, migrants, and marginalized communities, the book reveals how these movements reshaped urban identity and challenged both state power and real estate capital across East and West Berlin. With sharp research and vivid narrative, Berlin Manifesto maps the impact of squatting on housing policy, cultural memory, and the city’s legal frameworks, ultimately advocating for the protection of historic sites like Tacheles and the future of diverse creative communities.
Bold, urgent, and unapologetically political, Berlin Manifesto is both a historical account and a call to reimagine the city as a shared cultural commons. This is not just a book. This is a spark.
Do you believe that art belongs to those who dream without permission, and that cities should remain imperfect, shared, and alive?
If yes, then this book was written with you.
Berlin Manifesto: Culture Against Capital is a tribute to the unruly spirit that once occupied the cracks of Berlin. It is a journey into a city where abandoned buildings became community anchors, where art rose from ruin, and where resistance wasn’t an ideology but a way of living. This book asks what polite urbanism avoids: Who decides what is preserved? Who has the right to belong? And what becomes of a city when creativity is priced out of existence?
Inside these pages, discover the story of Berlin’s squatting movements from 1969 to 2016 and how they transformed vacant structures into spaces of political defiance, cultural experimentation, and collective life. Through the experiences of artists, activists, anarchists, migrants, and marginalized communities, the book reveals how these movements reshaped urban identity and challenged both state power and real estate capital across East and West Berlin. With sharp research and vivid narrative, Berlin Manifesto maps the impact of squatting on housing policy, cultural memory, and the city’s legal frameworks, ultimately advocating for the protection of historic sites like Tacheles and the future of diverse creative communities.
Bold, urgent, and unapologetically political, Berlin Manifesto is both a historical account and a call to reimagine the city as a shared cultural commons. This is not just a book. This is a spark.
Author website
Features & Details
- Primary Category: Architecture
- Additional Categories Social Science, History
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Project Option: 8×10 in, 20×25 cm
# of Pages: 306 -
Isbn
- Hardcover, ImageWrap: 9798261196013
- Publish Date: Dec 16, 2025
- Language English
- Keywords Germany, squatting, Tacheles, Architecture, Berlin
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