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Urban living presents both challenges and opportunities for individuals and societies in their attempts to maintain and determine their cultural identity. Mobility, fragility, and inventive self-fashioning are common features of life in Europe's big cities throughout the modern period.
This volume is based on papers given at the conference 'Imagining the City' held in Cambridge in 2004. Together they examine the city as imagined space and as a matrix for imagined worlds, using French, German, English, Italian, Russian and North American examples. They analyse modes of literary representation of the city and literary readings of cultural politics; the impact of the imagination of artists and architects on the fashioning of urban landscapes; the effect of new technologies and media (flight, photography, film, and the internet) on urban perception; and the impact of artistic interventions and activist movements on the construction and use of public spaces in the world of today. A second volume will examine the cultural and political moulding of urban space in a similar comparative perspective.
Sommario
Contents: Christian J. Emden/Catherine Keen/David Midgley: Introduction - Peter Burke: Imagining Identity in the Early Modern City - Síofra Pierse: The City for Voltaire and Rousseau 1776-1778: The Imaginings of Old Age - Hannah Thompson: The Monster and the Monument in Victor Hugo's Paris - Anthony Phelan: Reading Paris: Political Hermeneutics in Heine's Lutezia - Simon Kemp: Urban Hell: Infernal Cities in Modern French Literature - Cornelia Ruhe: Premeditated Cities: The Imaginary of the Metropolis - Susanne Hauser: Controlling the Modern City - Silke Arnold-de Simine: Remembering the Future: Utopian and Dystopian Aspects of Glass and Iron Architecture in Walter Benjamin, Paul Scheerbarth, and W. G. Sebald - Franz Bauer: De Chirico as Architect: Space and Void in Conceptions of the City between the World Wars - Davide Deriu: The Ascent of the Modern Planeur: Aerial Images and Urban Imaginary in the 1920s - Steven Jacobs: From Flâneur to Chauffeur: Driving Through Cinematic Cities - Kristin Veel: CyberCitizen: Urban Identity in Net Art - Anna Schober: Political Squats: Cinema and City as Movers of the Real - Jill Fenton: Contemporary Surrealist Geographies of Utopia and Dystopia - Geneviève Québriac: The City: A Space for Event-Related Encounters - Yvonne Houy: The Situationist Metro/Electro Polis: Re-Imagining Urban Spaces in the Twenty-First Century.
Info autore
The Editors: Christian Emden is Assistant Professor of German Studies at Rice University. Educated at the Universities of Konstanz and Cambridge, he was a Research Fellow at Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge (2000-2003).
Catherine Keen is Lecturer in Italian at University College London. After completing doctoral and post-doctoral studies at Cambridge, she lectured in Italian at the Universities of Leeds and Bristol before moving to University College London.
David Midgley is Reader in German Literature and Culture at the University of Cambridge and Fellow of St John's College, Cambridge. He studied at Oxford (DPhil 1975) and was a Humboldt Scholar in 1979.