Regarding the social unrest of his time, the famous modernist architect Le Corbusier once stated that it was either “architecture or revolution.” But what about architecture in a revolution and as revolution? How has architecture been put in service of radical politics? And how have architects translated their ideologies into design? In this course, we will look at the intersections of architecture and radical politics by reading, among others, leftist European architects and Soviet avant-gardists who used architecture to restructure society along with socialist and social-democratic principles about architectures of fascism and crony capitalism and about designers from both the radical left and right who theorized total destruction as the precondition for their utopias (or dystopias). We will write manifestos, visual analyses, critical essays, and more.

Image: Ahmet Öğüt, Bakunin‘s Barricade, 2015, various materials. A barricade inspired by Mikhail A. Bakunin’s never-realized proposal from 1849. Installation view, Kunsthal Charlottenborg, 2017.