Antoinette Burton>, Dwelling in the Archive: Women Writing House, Home, and History in Late Colonial India. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003.x+202pp. Bibliography. £13.50 pbk
In: Urban history, Volume 32, Issue 2, p. 381-383
ISSN: 1469-8706
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In: Urban history, Volume 32, Issue 2, p. 381-383
ISSN: 1469-8706
In: Urban history, Volume 31, Issue 1, p. 165-167
ISSN: 1469-8706
In: Urban history, Volume 46, Issue 2, p. 288-308
ISSN: 1469-8706
ABSTRACTThis article examines the neglected sensory experience of visual physical colour in the city/town centre or what is now referred to as the Central Business District. It focuses on the post-war period when reconstruction, town planning, new architecture, novel materials and technologies, and investment were all transforming British city centres. The research uses film, photographs, planning documents, oral history and social media reminiscences to research the users' experience of colour in the city centre streets. It argues that, although new materials in construction opened up the possibilities of bright, 'non-natural' colours in the urban built environment, the visual experience of colour was found mainly in the ephemera of everyday life. Furthermore, it argues that colour was an important component in constructing people's sense of place and belonging in the city.
In: Urban history, p. 1-16
ISSN: 1469-8706
Abstract
This survey reflects on a creative workshop which the authors ran for the 'The State of Urban History: Past, Present, Future' conference (July 2023). 'Making manifestos for urban history' was an experiment to encourage small group work and co-operative outputs in a conference setting, allowing for an atypical 'many-to-many' model of participation. During the session, five groups each produced a manifesto poster addressing issues that they thought were important for the future of urban history. The survey sets out the form the workshop followed, considers those who were involved and comments on how successful the workshop was in fostering conference community and active learning. Feedback recorded at the end of the session indicated that it was indeed successful in both these areas. Overall, the workshop demonstrated that when urban historians work together across generations and continents, they produce work of real value, which is resilient and sustainable.
In: Cultural Geographies, Volume 13, Issue 4, p. 577-599
This paper is inspired by an outbreak of pulmonary tuberculosis in the British East Midlands city of Leicester in 2001. In an era characterized by unprecedented advances in Western medical science an event of this kind might appear surprising. It challenges the feeling of wellbeing held in many Western countries, particularly in relation to diseases that appear both temporally and spatially distant. The paper examines how the event was reported in regional and national newspaper media and considers the significance attached to scale in the interactions between experts, the media and the public. In our analysis we mobilize a particular reading based on two biological metaphors, the membrane and the gene. We use this reading to reconsider the connectivity between disease, nation and identity in a world that is increasingly fluid, mobile, anxious and uncertain.
In: Urban history, Volume 27, Issue 3, p. 438-473
ISSN: 1469-8706
This bibliography is a continuation of and a complement to those published in the Urban History Yearbook 1974–91 and Urban History 1992–99. The arrangement and format closely follows that of previous years. The list of abbreviations identifies only those periodicals from which articles cited this year have been taken.
In: Urban history, Volume 23, Issue 3, p. 402-443
ISSN: 1469-8706
In: Urban history, Volume 24, Issue 3, p. 388-447
ISSN: 1469-8706
In: Urban history, Volume 22, Issue 3, p. 415-480
ISSN: 1469-8706
In: Scandinavian economic history review, Volume 48, Issue 3, p. 72-95
ISSN: 1750-2837