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Imaginary Cities
Darran Anderson
其他書名
A Tour of Dream Cities, Nightmare Cities, and Everywhere in Between
出版
University of Chicago Press
, 2017-04-06
主題
Architecture / Criticism
Architecture / History / General
Architecture / Urban & Land Use Planning
History / General
Literary Criticism / General
Literary Criticism / Subjects & Themes / General
Social Science / Folklore & Mythology
Social Science / Human Geography
Social Science / Sociology / Urban
ISBN
022647030X
9780226470306
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=c5YtDwAAQBAJ&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
For as long as humans have gathered in cities, those cities have had their shining—or shadowy—counterparts. Imaginary cities, potential cities, future cities, perfect cities. It is as if the city itself, its inescapable gritty reality and elbow-to-elbow nature, demands we call into being some alternative, yearned-for better place.
This book is about those cities. It’s neither a history of grand plans nor a literary exploration of the utopian impulse, but rather something different, hybrid, idiosyncratic. It’s a magpie’s book, full of characters and incidents and ideas drawn from cities real and imagined around the globe and throughout history. Thomas More’s allegorical island shares space with Soviet mega-planning; Marco Polo links up with James Joyce’s meticulously imagined Dublin; the medieval land of Cockaigne meets the hopeful future of Star Trek. With Darran Anderson as our guide, we find common themes and recurring dreams, tied to the seemingly ineluctable problems of our actual cities, of poverty and exclusion and waste and destruction. And that’s where
Imaginary Cities
becomes more than a mere—if ecstatically entertaining—intellectual exercise: for, as Anderson says, “If a city can be imagined into being, it can be re-imagined.” Every architect, philosopher, artist, writer, planner, or citizen who dreams up an imaginary city offers lessons for our real ones; harnessing those flights of hopeful fancy can help us improve the streets where we live.
Though it shares DNA with books as disparate as Calvino’s
Invisible Cities
and Jane Jacobs’s
Death and Life of Great American Cities
, there’s no other book quite like
Imaginary Cities
. After reading it, you’ll walk the streets of your city—real or imagined—with fresh eyes.