London
Bread and Circuses
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Verso Books
Published:17th Dec '03
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
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Explores London's Millennial follies and asks how and where London might now channel its energies
This illustrated guide to the changing architecture of London argues that new developments are a deliberate distraction from the city's economic and political problems.Bread and circuses-free food and mass entertainment-was the name contemporary social observers gave to the ancient Roman practice of keeping the common people happy and rebellion-free. Jonathan Glancey, in this personal and passionate essay about the city he loves, suggests that the same unformulated policy is the means by which modern London's citizens are kept as apolitical and passively pleasure-loving as possible. But shops, restaurants and a few gorgeous buildings are, he maintains, a poor substitute for a creaking infrastructure, and London's cachet as a boisterously creative but well-run city will plummet if private vice is allowed to triumph over public virtue.
His small book is peculiarly significant because it is totally un-selfconscious, a final despairing shout from a humanist for whom architecture is too often vacuous bunkum. -- Jay Merrick * Independent *
Jonathan Glancey is a wonderful communicator. -- Norman Foster
ISBN: 9781859844649
Dimensions: 185mm x 132mm x 10mm
Weight: 242g
156 pages