Blueprint by Theresia Ezensberger
German fiction
Original title – Blaupause
Translator – Lucy Jones
Source – Personal copy
I have been missing this year’s German lit month. Still, I think for the first time in years, I just hadn’t planned for this month, so I am posting a lot fewer books than I have in other years, but this is the first of two books I will be reviewing. You know, strangely, it isn’t too. I came to sit and do this review; I think the two books have similar themes in the time they were set and the underlying story of the time, both set in the years before World War Two. But this is a modern story written by the daughter of one of Germany’s leading thinkers, Hans Magnus Enzenberger, a cultural commenter. This was her debut novel, and she has since written a second novel, which was listed for the German book prize when it came out last year.
For a moment, Gropius seems confused at my being in his room; then he collects himself. ‘Come in, sit down. What can I do for you?’ Now it’s my turn to be confused. He’s the one who asked me to come, after all, so why do I have to explain myself?
Perhaps institutional mechanisms at the Bauhaus work in the usual bureaucratic way – an invisible hand consisting of protocol, regulations and appointments bringing people together who aren’t exactly sure how they ended up there.
I explain that I’m new to the Bauhaus and that I was asked to introduce myself and bring my portfolio. Gropius’ face brightens.’Ah, that’s right, a new student.
Luise meets the great man as she is due to start at the Bauhaus as a student
Blueprint is about a student, Luise Schilling. She has lived in a traditional family in Berlin and wants to change the world around her as she studies architecture. She has decided to go to the Bah=uhaus and study under Gropius. We see her meet the man himself but get drawn to the alternative thoughts and lifestyle of those studying at the Bauhaus. The young Luise is drawn to a group of students following a spiritual path and an enigmatic student, Jakob, who is involved with the group. This is a girl becoming a woman as her eyes are opened by the students and world around her. But this is the late twenties, and events back with her family in Berlin, where violence is bubbling under the surface of the city. Whilst she is with her parents. This is all before the Bauhaus moves to it famous home, which happens later in the book. There is also the tale of her trying to get her ideas around social housing accepted.
Luise Schilling: There Goes the Neighborhood. Social Enclaves in the Shadow of Urban Planning, Sichter Verlag, Stuttgart. 368 pages, 12,80 DM
If you’re interested in architecture, these days, chances are you’re probably interested in the Bauhaus school.
Such a proclivity will make this book by German-born American, Luise Schilling, who studied architecture at the Bauhaus before the war, all the more astounding. For her There Goes The Neighborhood, she makes a case against the kind of holistic city planning preached and practised at the Bauhaus. Instead, Schilling demands that the city is seen as it is: a cluster of small, independent economic zones and organic communities. According to the author’s indignant thesis, urban planners are out of touch with urban populations.
Later her ideas get taken on board as show later near the end of the book.
There are benefits and downsides to her choice to use the Bauhaus as the book’s centre; that is, we all know of it, but then it, for me, needs a little more depth around Groupis. The main thing is that it makes you want to read the book but then feel you want more of the Bauhaus. But then it is mainly Luise’s story, which is one of a woman growing up escaping an overbearing father and initially finding freedom of thought and ideas in a group of students. Still, later in the book, we see how, in a way, the restrictions of her being a female are still there when her ideas are sidelined. But then later, when seen after the war, her accurate visionary idea comes to light. Add to this is the story of what is happening in the background with her family in Berlin, away from the dreamland that is Basuhaus and the events that lead to the rise of Hitler are there to be seen. The other book I am about to finish is set a few years after this and shows the events after this book well. Have you read this or any books by her father? I have a book under review by him as well.
Winston’s score – B – a great coming-of-age story that shows how females still couldn’t go as far as they wanted, even in the Bauhaus.















