Owen Hatherley


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Owen Hatherley

Goodreads Author


Born
in Southampton, The United Kingdom
Website

Twitter

Member Since
December 2019

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Writer and editor

Average rating: 3.94 · 2,425 ratings · 304 reviews · 43 distinct worksSimilar authors
A Guide to the New Ruins of...

4.01 avg rating — 282 ratings — published 2010 — 7 editions
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The Ministry of Nostalgia

3.58 avg rating — 305 ratings — published 2016 — 6 editions
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Militant Modernism

3.79 avg rating — 265 ratings — published 2009 — 11 editions
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Landscapes of Communism: A ...

4.03 avg rating — 244 ratings — published 2015 — 2 editions
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Trans-Europe Express

3.92 avg rating — 231 ratings — published 2018 — 7 editions
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Red Metropolis: Socialism a...

4.36 avg rating — 158 ratings — published 2020 — 3 editions
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Soviet Metro Stations

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4.58 avg rating — 121 ratings
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Uncommon

3.81 avg rating — 122 ratings — published 2011 — 9 editions
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A New Kind of Bleak: Journe...

4.13 avg rating — 105 ratings — published 2012 — 10 editions
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The Adventures of Owen Hath...

4.03 avg rating — 71 ratings — published 2018 — 3 editions
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Owen’s Recent Updates

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Bankruptcy, bubbles and bailouts by Aeron Davis
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The Light of Asia by Christopher    Harding
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The Moonstone by Wilkie Collins
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Great characters and good humoured but my god, so much Plot.
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Architecture and Urbanism in Modern Korea by Inha Jung
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The Moonstone by Wilkie Collins
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Great characters and good humoured but my god, so much Plot.
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Finding Ella Briggs by Despina Stratigakos
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Fills in a lot of gaps in the life of an interesting but under-published architect, with an interesting, sometimes non-linear and thematic approach, but also, what an absolutely extraordinary life - from Vienna to New York to Bilston, from Mucha to H ...more
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The Lost Subways of North America by Jake Berman
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How the USA and Canada once had highly developed public transport networks and buggered them up (not so much in Canada), told through text and beautiful and clever maps. The account of how this happened is sobering - shared left-right anti-planning i ...more
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Flats and Cottages by Eoin Ó Broin
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The Unaccountability Machine by Dan Davies
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In the days when I was posting this sort of thing on twitter, rather than on this rubbish but much quieter microblogging site, I always enjoyed following Dan Davies, who was in that rare category of 'people on the centre-left who were intellectually ...more
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Hayek's Bastards by Quinn Slobodian
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Highly readable (as always) and very interesting on the wankers who spent the 90s dreaming the epoch we now live in, and on the right's interesting and, for them, politically useful unwillingness to admit when they've won, but also rather caffeinated ...more
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Quotes by Owen Hatherley  (?)
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“Brutalist architecture was Modernism's angry underside, and was never, much as some would rather it were, a mere aesthetic style. It was a political aesthetic, an attitude, a weapon, dedicated to the precept that nothing was too good for ordinary people. Now, after decades of neglect, it's devided between 'eyesores' and 'icons'; fine for the Barbican's stockbrokers but unacceptable for the ordinary people who were always its intended clients.”
Owen Hatherley, A Guide to the New Ruins of Great Britain

“Again, we find that the space standards of twenty-first century luxury are below the required minimum for dockworkers in 1962.”
Owen Hatherley, A Guide to the New Ruins of Great Britain

“It is important to record that the ‘Keep Calm and Carry On’ poster was never mass-produced until 2008. It is a historical object of a very peculiar sort. By 2009, when it had first become hugely popular, it seemed to respond to a particularly English malaise, one connected directly with the way Britain reacted to the credit crunch and the banking crash. From this moment of crisis, it tapped into an already established narrative about Britain’s ‘finest hour’ – the aerial Battle of Britain in 1940–41 – when it was the only country left fighting the Third Reich. This was a moment of entirely indisputable – and apparently uncomplicated – national heroism, one which Britain has clung to through thick and thin. Even during the height of the boom, as the critical theorist Paul Gilroy spotted in his 2004 book After Empire, the Blitz and the Victory were frequently invoked, made necessary by ‘the need to get back to the place or moment before the country lost its moral and cultural bearings’. ‘1940’ and ‘1945’ were ‘obsessive repetitions’, ‘anxious and melancholic’, morbid fetishes, clung to as a means of not thinking about other aspects of recent British history – most obviously, its Empire. This has only intensified since the financial crisis began.

The ‘Blitz spirit’ has been exploited by politicians largely since 1979. When Thatcherites and Blairites spoke of ‘hard choices’ and ‘muddling through’, they often evoked the memories of 1941. It served to legitimate regimes which constantly argued that, despite appearances to the contrary, resources were scarce and there wasn’t enough money to go around; the most persuasive way of explaining why someone (else) was inevitably going to suffer. Ironically, however, this rhetoric of sacrifice was often combined with a demand that the consumers enrich themselves – buy their house, get a new car, make something of themselves, ‘aspire’.”
Owen Hatherley, The Ministry of Nostalgia

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