Book Description
This book proposes a pedagogy of black urban struggle and solidarity.
Author : Stephen Nathan Haymes
Publisher : SUNY Press
Page : 190 pages
File Size : 38,70 MB
Release : 1995-01-01
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 9780791423837
This book proposes a pedagogy of black urban struggle and solidarity.
Author : Michel Conan
Publisher : Dumbarton Oaks Research Library & Collection
Page : 284 pages
File Size : 35,14 MB
Release : 2008
Category : Architecture
ISBN :
Seeks to understand the roles played by gardens from Roman antiquity to approximately 1850, particularly as they relate to public life in large cities.
Author : Tom Borrup
Publisher : Routledge
Page : 188 pages
File Size : 44,94 MB
Release : 2020-11-29
Category : Architecture
ISBN : 100024508X
The Power of Culture in City Planning focuses on human diversity, strengths, needs, and ways of living together in geographic communities. The book turns attention to the anthropological definition of culture, encouraging planners in both urban and cultural planning to focus on characteristics of humanity in all their variety. It calls for a paradigm shift, re-positioning city planners’ "base maps" to start with a richer understanding of human cultures. Borrup argues for cultural master plans in parallel to transportation, housing, parks, and other specialized plans, while also changing the approach of city comprehensive planning to put people or "users" first rather than land "uses" as does the dominant practice. Cultural plans as currently conceived are not sufficient to help cities keep pace with dizzying impacts of globalization, immigration, and rapidly changing cultural interests. Cultural planners need to up their game, and enriching their own and city planners’ cultural competencies is only one step. Both planning practices have much to learn from one another and already overlap in more ways than most recognize. This book highlights some of the strengths of the lesser-known practice of cultural planning to help forge greater understanding and collaboration between the two practices, empowering city planners with new tools to bring about more equitable communities. This will be an important resource for students, teachers, and practitioners of city and cultural planning, as well as municipal policymakers of all stripes.
Author : Leigh N. Hersey
Publisher : Rowman & Littlefield
Page : 245 pages
File Size : 42,82 MB
Release : 2021-03-12
Category : Art
ISBN : 1793633916
Engagement in the City: How Arts and Culture Impact Development in Urban Areas provides readers with numerous examples of ways that the arts can contribute to community development. Through the diverse backgrounds of its contributing authors - representing artists, art educators, and public administration scholars – the role of arts is explored as a contributing factor in strengthening communities. The book shows that the arts have the potential to positively impact a wide variety of development interests, including economic, education, health, social capital, and of cultural. The book provides strategies and techniques for implementing successful arts-based projects, whether it be through public art initiatives, service-learning opportunities, or the development or cultural districts. Cross-sectoral collaboration is a key in many of these projects, making the book beneficial for artists and community leaders who seek ways to work together to improve their cities.
Author : Dorothée Imbert
Publisher : Dumbarton Oaks Colloquium Series in the History of Landscape Architecture
Page : 0 pages
File Size : 17,31 MB
Release : 2015
Category : Sustainable agriculture
ISBN : 9780884024040
Food and the City explores the physical, social, and political relations between the production of food and urban settlements. Essays offer a variety of perspectives--from landscape and architectural history to geography--on the multiple scales and ideologies of productive landscapes across the globe from the sixteenth century to the present.
Author : Dr Alexander Cowan
Publisher : Ashgate Publishing, Ltd.
Page : 260 pages
File Size : 50,19 MB
Release : 2013-06-28
Category : History
ISBN : 1409479609
How do we experience a city in terms of the senses? What are the inter-relations between human experience and behaviour in urban space? This volume examines these questions in the context of European urban culture between the fifteenth and twentieth centuries, exploring the institutions and ideologies relating to the range of sensual experience and its interpretation. Spanning pre-industrial and modern cities in Britain, France, Germany and the United States, it enables the reader to establish major contrasts and continuities in what is still an evolving urban experience. Divided into sections corresponding to the five senses: noise, vision, taste, touch and smell, each sections allows for comparisons which act as reminders that the experience of the city was a multi-sensual one, and that these experiences were as much intellectual as physical in their nature.
Author : Uta Staiger
Publisher : Springer
Page : 248 pages
File Size : 22,10 MB
Release : 2015-12-04
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 0230246958
These essays by leading figures from academia, architecture and the arts consider how cultures of memory are constructed for and in contemporary cities. They take Berlin as a key case of a historically burdened metropolis, but also extend to other global cities: Jerusalem, Buenos Aires, Cape Town and New York.
Author : Blagovesta Momchedjikova
Publisher : Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Page : 280 pages
File Size : 46,39 MB
Release : 2013-12-05
Category : History
ISBN : 1443854638
Captured by the City: Perspectives in Urban Culture Studies is a collection of eighteen essays on urban places, people, and phenomena. In it, cities in North America, Europe, and Asia offer themselves as dynamic encounters to those who study them and to those who live in them on a daily basis. Different disciplines-Sociology, Anthropology, Performance Studies, Architectural History, Linguistics, Media Studies, Documentary Poetics, to name just a few-intersect here to help shape a unique field of inquiry-that of Urban Culture Studies. This multi-perspectival approach grants us a more wholesome understanding of how we inscribe cities and how cities inscribe us in return: as we plan, inhabit, remember them-in reality or in dreams.
Author : James Scorer
Publisher : SUNY Press
Page : 250 pages
File Size : 49,60 MB
Release : 2016-05-01
Category : History
ISBN : 1438460570
Addresses ways that cultural imaginaries point toward alternative urban futures. In this book James Scorer argues that culture remains a force for imagining inclusive urban futures based around what inhabitants of the city have in common. Using Buenos Aires as his case study, Scorer takes the urban commons to be those aspects of the city that are shared and used by its various communities. Exploring a hugely diverse set of works, including literature, film, and comics, and engaging with urban theory, political philosophy, and Latin American cultural studies, City in Common paints a portrait of the city caught between opposing forces. Scorer seeks out alternatives to the current trend in analysis of urban culture to read Buenos Aires purely through the lens of segregation, division, and enclosure. Instead, he argues that urban imaginaries can and often do offer visions of more open communities and more inclusive urban futures.
Author : Kevin R. McNamara
Publisher :
Page : 417 pages
File Size : 16,57 MB
Release : 2021-08-05
Category : History
ISBN : 1108841961
This book examines what literature and film reveal about the urban USA. Subjects include culture, class, race, crime, and disaster.