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recognition factor is probably Ottakring, home to both the city’s
one and only brewery and the city’s longest street market, which
is the Brunnenmarkt, named for the fountain that enlightened
monarch Joseph II had connected to the Hernalser water pipe in
1786, so that people outside the city walls had access to the fresh
drinking water that flowed down from the Wienerwald to the
Hofburg palace in the center of town. The district’s socio-cultur-
al conditions came to be shaped by “an above average share of a
migrant population, which started to become apparent mostly
in a transforming local economy in the 1990s, and which was re-
currently problematized in public discourse” (Suitner 2015, 36).
That, together with the area’s low quality housing stock, led to
a thorough-going revitalization between 2005 and 2010, spark-
ing considerable culturally led gentrification in the surround-
ing Brunnenviertel (ibid., 36). Developments in the area can
be gauged in a section of a report on the district entitled “Vom
gründerzeitlichen Arbeiterviertel zum ethnisch geprägten
Quartier zur urbanen Trendzone” [“From nineteenth-century
working-class quarter to a neighborhood known for its ethnici-
ties to urban hipsterdom”] (Antalovsky et al. 2008).
The tensions wrought by these developments have made
Ottakring a favored location for contemporary screen culture
interested in tackling issues related to multiculturalism and
gentrification. Kebab mit Alles! [Kebab with Everything!] (2011,
dir. Wolfgang Murnberger), Die Freischwimmerin [A Female
Swimming without Supports] (2014, dir. Holger Barthel), Planet
Ottakring (2015, dir. Michael Riebl), Kebab extra scharf! [Kebab
Extra Spicy!] (2017, dir. Wolfgang Murnberger), and CopStories
(since 2013 on oRF) all extrapolate the district’s demographics
into thoughtfully trenchant, solution-oriented meditations on
living together. Yet they differ considerably in focus, with the
only local director, Michael Riebl, not representing the district
in terms of an identitarian culture clash.2 In choosing to empha-
theme of that special issue.
2 Riebl describes his childhood as spent between the Ottakring Cemetery
and the Brunnenmarkt (“meine Kindheit hat sich zwischen Ottakringer
Siting Futurity
The “Feel Good” Tactical Radicalism of Contemporary Culture in and around Vienna
- Titel
- Siting Futurity
- Untertitel
- The “Feel Good” Tactical Radicalism of Contemporary Culture in and around Vienna
- Autor
- Susan Ingram
- Verlag
- punctumbooks
- Ort
- New York
- Datum
- 2021
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-1-953035-48-6
- Abmessungen
- 12.6 x 20.2 cm
- Seiten
- 224
- Schlagwörter
- activism, Austria, contemporary art, contemporary theater, protest culture, radicalism, social protest, Vienna
- Kategorie
- Geographie, Land und Leute
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- Preface 11
- Introduction 19
- 1. (Re)Forming Vienna’s Culture of Resistance: The Proletenpassions @ #Arena 39
- 2. Converting Kebab and Currency into Community on Planet #Ottakring 57
- 3. Lazarus’s Necropolitical Afterlife at Vienna’s #Volkstheater 81
- 4. Hardly Homemad(e): #Schlingensief’s Container 101
- 5. From Grand Hotels to Tiny Treasures: Wes Anderson and the Ruin Porn Worlds of Yesterday 119
- 6. Capitalism, Schizophrenia, and #Vanlife: The Alpine Edukation of Hans Weingarter 143
- 7. #Hallstatt: Welcome to Jurassic World 161
- Bibliography 189
- Filmography 215