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Informationen zum Autor Nezar AlSayyad is Professor of Architecture, Planning and Urban History at the University of California at Berkeley. He is the Associate Dean for International Programs at the College of Environmental Design, and Chair of the Center for Middle Eastern Studies at Berkeley. Additionally, he is the Director of the International Association for the Study of Traditional Environments and principal editor of its journal, Traditional Dwellings and Settlements Review. Zusammenfassung Exploring the relationship between cities and their cinematic portrayals in over a century of film, this book shows how notions of society inform and are influenced by the images we have come to know on screen. Inhaltsverzeichnis Introduction: The Cinematic City and the Quest for the Modern 1. Industrial Modernity: The Flâneur and the Tramp in the Early Twentieth Century 2. Urbanizing Modernity: The Traditional Cinematic Small Town 3. Orwellian Modernity: Utopia/Dystopia and the City of the Future Past 4. Cynical Modernity, or the Modernity of Cynicism 5. From Postmodern Condition to Cinematic City 6. Voyeuristic Modernity: The Lens, the Screen and the City 7. The City through Different Eyes: The Modernity of the Sophisticate and the Misfit 8. An Alternative Modernity: Race, Ethnicity and the Urban Experience 9. Exurban Postmodernity: Utopia, Simulacra and Hyper-Reality