Sachlichkeit in Germany and Austria, 1890-1950
The German term Sachlichkeit
is central to the development and interpretation of twentieth-century modernism—and yet it is
rarely fully understood. In 1936, design historian Nikolaus Pevsner wrote
that the “untranslatable word sachlich, meaning at the same time
pertinent, matter-of-fact, and objective, became the catchword of the growing
Modern Movement.” Though frequently translated as “objectivity” or
“functionalism,” Sachlichkeit’s implications for the modern period—in architecture,
art, design, photography, literature, sociology, and philosophy—are far more
profound and expansive than these English words allow. This course will
interrogate the concept of Sachlichkeit through its myriad
manifestations, beginning with its roots in common German parlance, the
empirical natural and human sciences, and vernacular-modernist architecture of
the late nineteenth century, and culminating in its continuing cultural
relevance in the aftermath of the Second World War. At the heart of the course is
an exploration of Sachlichkeit in the visual and material culture of the
German Wilhelmine Empire, Weimar Republic, and Third Reich, as well as in the
Austrian “Vienna Circle” of philosophers and social scientists. We will
pay close attention to specific cultural moments, particular individuals,
materials, processes, images, and objects.
Readings will move back and forth between philosophical/sociological
contexts and those of aesthetic theory and practical production, challenging
received notions of causation. As a result of close work with this
pivotal concept, students will leave the course with a deeper, more complex
understanding of modernism and its place in the practice of cultural and
material history. 3 credits.