Writing the global city: globalisation, postcolonialism and the urban
In: Architext series
27 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Architext series
In: Routledge Library Editions: Economic Geography
Recent years have witnessed a surge in public awareness concerning the impact of world economic forces on cities. In this challenging book, the author argues that though the consciousness is new the phenomena themselves are not. For the past two centuries at least, world economic, political and cultural forces have been major factors shaping cities, patterns of urbanization and the physical and spatial forms of the built environment. Anthony King believes that the historical context of contemporary global restructuring must be recognized if present-day urban and regional change is to be proper
The Study focuses on the social and, more especially, the cultural processes governing colonial urban development and develops a theory and methodology to do this.The author demonstrates how the physical and spatial arrangements characterizing urban development are unique products of a particular society, to be understood only in terms of its values, behaviour and institutions and the distribution of social and political power within it. Nowhere is this more apparent than in 'colonial cities' of Asia and Africa where the environmental assumptions of a dominant, industrializing Western power we
In: ArchiText series
In: The architext series
In: EBSCOhost eBook Collection
In: International library of sociology
In: Negotiating urban conflicts: interaction, space and control, S. 15-28
In: Globalization and the Margins, S. 72-90
In: International journal of urban and regional research: IJURR, Band 25, Heft 1, S. 210-212
ISSN: 0309-1317
In: Re-Presenting the City, S. 1-19
In: Comparative studies in society and history, Band 37, Heft 3, S. 541-554
ISSN: 1475-2999
Globalization is used to spatialize modernity in two senses. First, the globalization problematique enunciates that about which the previous temporal notion of modernity was suspiciously silent, that it is spatial, Western, & white. Modernity is not about the spread of ideas, but is fundamentally structural & world systemic. Second, modernity is also spatial in that it happens in cities, especially global cities. Urban & global modernity is that where "all that is solid melts into air." Modernity is no longer in metropolitan but in colonial space, where the solid is melting into air at the greatest speed. The most frantic development of migrant & finance flows takes place in colonial space. The global colonial cities have long ago undergone the sort of class polarization that core global cities have just begun to experience. There is no need for a concept of postmodernity when modernization on a world scale (& global colonial cities) has only been with us in the last quarter century. 47 References. V. Rios