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Cities in Modernity

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Cities in Modernity Synopsis

What made cities 'modern' in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries? Cities in Modernity explores connections between culture, economy and built environment in cities of this period, drawing its evidence principally from London, New York and Toronto. The book discusses both the cultural experience of modernity and the material modernization of cities, placing special emphasis on their historical geographies, on the production, representation and use of urban space. The opening chapters present new ways of seeing cities in political and religious discourse, social survey, mapping, art and literature. The book then concentrates on new kinds of public and private spaces, such as apartment buildings, office blocks and department stores, and the networks of communication between them. An important theme throughout is the gendered experience of the new types of environment. The book will appeal to scholars and students of historical geography, urban history and cultural studies.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9780521464703
Publication date: 28th April 2008
Author: Richard University College London Dennis
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Format: Hardback
Pagination: 458 pages
Series: Cambridge Studies in Historical Geography
Genres: Urban communities
Historical geography
Social and cultural history