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The Public and Its Possibilities

Triumphs and Tragedies in the American City

John D Fairfield author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Temple University Press,U.S.

Published:26th Mar '10

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The Public and Its Possibilities cover

Throughout U.S. history, unrealized civic aspirations provide the essential counterpoint to an excessive focus on private interests

Throughout U.S. history, our unrealized civic aspirations provide the essential counterpoint to an excessive focus on private interests of Technology.

“A sustained argument about the repeated and resilient assertion of public democracy in American cities, and the forces that inhibited and subverted its full expression.”—Mary Ryan, John Martin Vincent Professor of History, Johns Hopkins University


"As long ago as the 1920s Frederick Jackson Turner suggested an urban interpretation of American history; John Fairfield takes up that challenge. A hope long since abandoned to monographic specialization in the field has been happily realized in the powerful work of synthesis crafted by John Fairfield. The Public and Its Possibilities is a smart, imaginatively conceived and researched, well written, and passionately told history of the challenges and possibilities of a lively urban democratic public."
Thomas Bender, New York University

 


"A work of historical synthesis and political criticism, John Fairfield’s book is a powerful reminder of the indispensable role of American cities in fostering a more expansive civic culture. Fairfield writes in the tradition of Lewis Mumford, Paul and Percival Goodman, and Jane Jacobs—alert to the ever-changing landscape of streets and plazas, public institutions, and informal associations that have enabled city residents of different backgrounds to imagine themselves as citizens and act accordingly. And like those urbanist critics, Fairfield is acutely aware that the market fundamentalism that has devastated many American cities has had equally devastating consequences for our capacity for democratic self-government. His concluding call for a new ‘ecology of the city’ could not be more timely."
Casey Nelson Blake, Columbia University

ISBN: 9781439902103

Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 28mm

Weight: unknown

368 pages