Berlin's queer archipelago: Landscape, sexuality, and nightlife

The metaphor of the archipelago has informed ideas about Berlin's post‐war and post‐wall fractured urban landscape as well as recent work on sexual minorities in the city. In the context of Berlin's landscape, the image refers to green islands of spontaneous vegetation on sites left behind...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inTransactions - Institute of British Geographers (1965) Vol. 48; no. 1; pp. 100 - 116
Main Author Andersson, Johan
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London Wiley Subscription Services, Inc 01.03.2023
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Summary:The metaphor of the archipelago has informed ideas about Berlin's post‐war and post‐wall fractured urban landscape as well as recent work on sexual minorities in the city. In the context of Berlin's landscape, the image refers to green islands of spontaneous vegetation on sites left behind by bomb damage and border infrastructure, while in scholarship on sexuality, it suggests a more dispersed distribution of minority nightlife than in the traditional focus on the gayborhood. The two meanings come together in many of Berlin's electronic dance music clubs, which are located in overgrown voids—or Brachen in German—and form a queer archipelago outside the heteronormative grid. Drawing on insights from queer and ruderal ecology, as well as some of the memory literature from the early German reunification era, this paper explores these club islands in relation to the landscape term terrain vague. By focusing on two sites in the former East Berlin borough of Friedrichshain—Wriezener Park, next to the city's most famous club Berghain, and the Brache‐turned‐dance club ://about blank—Berlin's current status as a global centre for queer club culture is understood through the lens of its unusual urban landscape and spectral ecologies. Short The metaphor of the archipelago has informed ideas about Berlin's post‐war and post‐wall fractured urban landscape as well as recent work on sexual minorities in the city. Drawing on insights from queer and ruderal ecology, as well as some of the memory literature from the early German reunification‐era, this article explores Berlin's current status as a global centre for queer club culture through the lens of its unusual urban landscape and spectral ecologies.
ISSN:0020-2754
1475-5661
DOI:10.1111/tran.12585