
The Mobile Ruin
The Everyday Life of the Berlin Wall
McGill-Queen's University Press
Published on 31. May 2026
Book
Paperback/Softback
216 pages
978-0-2280-2686-0 (ISBN)
Description
The Berlin Wall divided the city for almost three decades before it fell on 9 November 1989. But this symbol of the Cold War has been travelling longer than it stood still. An object that once seemed immovable now wanders around the world in every format from two-tonne slabs to pocket-sized souvenirs.
This collection envisions the atomized and displaced remnants of the Berlin Wall as a mobile ruin with an evolving history. Blake Fitzpatrick and Vid Ingelevics's photographic investigation of the geographical dispersement of its fragments is a form of witness to the history of the wall after it fell. Featuring over one hundred photographs, intercut with powerful contextual writings by artists, scholars, and curators (including people involved in souvenir production and sale), this unique work raises compelling questions about the shifting meaning of Berlin Wall artifacts - essentially banal pieces of concrete - in light of their physical relocation and shifts in geopolitical power.
Contributing to our understanding of material history, public commemoration, border politics, and documentary studies, The Mobile Ruin explores the ongoing resonance of the wall and the new life it takes on in a series of unexpected international locations.
This collection envisions the atomized and displaced remnants of the Berlin Wall as a mobile ruin with an evolving history. Blake Fitzpatrick and Vid Ingelevics's photographic investigation of the geographical dispersement of its fragments is a form of witness to the history of the wall after it fell. Featuring over one hundred photographs, intercut with powerful contextual writings by artists, scholars, and curators (including people involved in souvenir production and sale), this unique work raises compelling questions about the shifting meaning of Berlin Wall artifacts - essentially banal pieces of concrete - in light of their physical relocation and shifts in geopolitical power.
Contributing to our understanding of material history, public commemoration, border politics, and documentary studies, The Mobile Ruin explores the ongoing resonance of the wall and the new life it takes on in a series of unexpected international locations.
Reviews / Votes
"Beautifully written and intelligently photographed, The Mobile Ruin poses timely questions, tracing a North American obsession with the symbolism of the fall of Berlin Wall, the current trend to solidify and securitize borders around the world, and the paradoxical fetishism of freedom embodied in the wall's relics." - Lee Rodney, University of Windsor"The Mobile Ruin transforms documentary into discovery. Part field guide, part elegy, part provocation, this book is a sharp, beautifully argued meditation on memory in motion. Fitzpatrick and Ingelevics show us that the Berlin Wall never stopped falling." - Justin Jampol, Wende Museum
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Montreal
Canada
Target group
Professional and scholarly
College/higher education
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Illustrations
139 photos, colour throughout
Dimensions
Height: 254 mm
Width: 229 mm
Thickness: 24 mm
Weight
988 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-2280-2686-0 (9780228026860)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Blake Fitzpatrick (Editor)
Blake Fitzpatrick is professor emeritus in the School of Image Arts, Toronto Metropolitan University, and co-editor of Place Matters: Critical Topographies in Word and Image.
Vid Ingelevics (Editor)
Vid Ingelevics is professor emeritus, School of Image Arts, Toronto Metropolitan University, and a visual artist, writer, and independent curator.
Blake Fitzpatrick is professor emeritus in the School of Image Arts, Toronto Metropolitan University, and co-editor of Place Matters: Critical Topographies in Word and Image.
Vid Ingelevics (Editor)
Vid Ingelevics is professor emeritus, School of Image Arts, Toronto Metropolitan University, and a visual artist, writer, and independent curator.
Content
PART 1 The Mobile Ruin
Photographs and Essays
North America and Berlin?3
Foreword 9
Doina Popescu
Arlington, VA, and Washington, DC?14
Introduction: The Mobile Ruin 21
Blake Fitzpatrick and Vid Ingelevics
California and Texas?43
1 The Iron Curtain and the Concrete Wall: Reading Berlin Wall. Truro, Nova Scotia. 59
Robert Bean
Nova Scotia, New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut?72
2 Fragments of Berlin (Notes on the Retrieval of the Scattered Remnants of the Berlin Wall) 87
Jonathan Bordo
Touching the Wall, Berlin?100
Berlin?102
3 A Monument in Motion 121
Jayne Wilkinson
Texas, and Texas/Tijuana Border?127
4 Epilogue 133
Blake Fitzpatrick and Vid Ingelevics
PART 2 The Souvenir Producers
Interviews by Blake Fitzpatrick and Vid Ingelevics
Introduction: The Souvenir Producers 145
Blake Fitzpatrick and Vid Ingelevics
1 Joe Sciamarelli (New Jersey) 153
2 Michael Mammitzsch (Bern) 158
3 Heidi Buehler (Berlin) 163
4 Thierry Noir (Los Angeles and Berlin) 167
5 Johannes Peter (Berlin) 175
6 Alwin Nachtweh (Berlin) 180
7 Patrice Lux (Berlin) 184
8 Axel Klausmeier (Berlin) 189
9 Marc Bauder (Toronto) 195
Acknowledgments 201
Contributors 203
Photographs and Essays
North America and Berlin?3
Foreword 9
Doina Popescu
Arlington, VA, and Washington, DC?14
Introduction: The Mobile Ruin 21
Blake Fitzpatrick and Vid Ingelevics
California and Texas?43
1 The Iron Curtain and the Concrete Wall: Reading Berlin Wall. Truro, Nova Scotia. 59
Robert Bean
Nova Scotia, New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut?72
2 Fragments of Berlin (Notes on the Retrieval of the Scattered Remnants of the Berlin Wall) 87
Jonathan Bordo
Touching the Wall, Berlin?100
Berlin?102
3 A Monument in Motion 121
Jayne Wilkinson
Texas, and Texas/Tijuana Border?127
4 Epilogue 133
Blake Fitzpatrick and Vid Ingelevics
PART 2 The Souvenir Producers
Interviews by Blake Fitzpatrick and Vid Ingelevics
Introduction: The Souvenir Producers 145
Blake Fitzpatrick and Vid Ingelevics
1 Joe Sciamarelli (New Jersey) 153
2 Michael Mammitzsch (Bern) 158
3 Heidi Buehler (Berlin) 163
4 Thierry Noir (Los Angeles and Berlin) 167
5 Johannes Peter (Berlin) 175
6 Alwin Nachtweh (Berlin) 180
7 Patrice Lux (Berlin) 184
8 Axel Klausmeier (Berlin) 189
9 Marc Bauder (Toronto) 195
Acknowledgments 201
Contributors 203