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How To Think About Cities

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Cities are raucous, cacophonous, and complex. Many dimensions of life play out and conflict across cities’ intricate landscapes, be they political, cultural, economic, or social. Urban policy makers and analysts often attempt to “cut through the noise” of urban disagreement by emphasizing a dominant lens for understanding the key, central logic of the city. How To Think About Cities sees this tendency to selective vision as misleading and ultimately unjust: cities are many things at once to different people and communities.

This book describes the various ways of seeing the functions and landscapes of the city as place frames, and the constant process of negotiating which place frames best explain the city as place-making. Martin and Pierce call for an explicitly hybrid perspective that shifts between many different frames for making sense of cities. This approach highlights how any given stance opens up some lines of inquiry and understanding while closing off others. Thinking of cities as sites of contested perspectives promotes a synthetic approach to urban analysis that emphasizes difference and political possibility.

This mosaic view of the city will be a welcome read for those within urban studies, geography, and social sciences exploring the many faces of urban life.

Authors: Martin Deborah, Pierce Joseph
Publisher: POLITY PRESS
Pages: 237
ISBN: 9781509536191
Cover: Paperback
Edition Number: 1
Release Year: 2023

1. Introduction: Cities are Places

2. City of London: A Machine for Living / The Seat of Wealth

3. Tehran: Islamic Developmentalism / Diverse Cosmopolitanism

4. Worcester: Local Economic Engine / Regional Forest Under Threat

5. Portland: Paradise of Environmentalism / Legacy of Exclusionary Racism

6. Chongqing: International Cyberpunk Marvel / National Policy Innovator

7. Jerusalem: Religious Tourist Destination / Ethno-National Citadel

8. Conclusion: The Impossibilities of Fully Knowing a City

Deborah G. Martin is Professor of Geography at Clark University.

Joseph Pierce is Senior Lecturer of Human Geography at the University of Aberdeen.

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