The product of over a decade's research and writing, Peter Hall's magnum opus explores the history of cities and their role in the development of civilisation from the cultural crucibles of Athens in the sixth century BC to the city as freeway, Los Angeles. A major book which will stand alongside such successful works of popular scholarship as Simon Schama's Citizens, Rob Hughes The shock of the New Orlando Figes' A peoples tragedy.
This is an exhaustive collection of everything you ever wanted to know about the history of cities from ancient times through the beginning of the 21st-century. Lots of good info here and a good reference book for the shelf.
A big book, but one that I found engaging. Sir Hall takes us on a journey through numerous world cities at the height of their importance in relation to world development (and a couple, like Elizabethain London and later World Financial Capital London, get two essays). A good, comprehensive - for essays anyway - overview of how these cities arrived at their particular golden ages, and how they faltered thereafter. Everything from Ancient Athens to 1950s Memphis and the Mississippi Delta (for the fusion of Rock-a-Billy, Country, and Blues into a new-fangled "Rock-n-Roll" that proved so important for the subsequent development of great music...at least until Brittney Spears and American Idol destroyed all subsequent development to the point where my 19 year-old female students would rather listen to Zepplin and Fleetwood Mac than any of the crap that gets aired these days). Highly recommended if you have a few months of spare time to kill!
Hall looks at cities from each of four perspectives: cultural crucibles; innovative milieu; a combination of art and technology; and establishing urban order, and under each of these headings, profiles a number of cities for the period when their flourishing from the perspective in question was at its greatest. So, for example, Athens between 500 and 400 BCE and Vienna between 1780 and 1910 are discussed for encouraging cultural flowering, Manchester and Berlin for being centres of technological innovation, LA for development of the film industry and so much more than just a film industry and first century Rome along with Paris and Stockholm for their development of urban order. Apart from omitting Toronto which regularly features in lists of the world’s most liveable cities, the book was an interesting and enjoyable read and compliments Richard Florida’s books on the creative class.
Very uneven. Early chapters focused on so-called "golden ages." (Elizabethan London, Renaissance Florence) Later chapters served as illustrations for developmental paths. (New York subways, Los Angeles highways) The last two chapters on modern cities, while interesting, seem to be more issue related. (Stockholm public housing, London Docklands)
Great sweeping book on the history of Western urban settlement and the rise of capitalism shaping settlement patterns. It is a huge book (not good for reading in bed) but it is well worth spending some time with.
Quite simply, one of the best books I've ever read. Certainly the best on commercialisation as it was experienced in various cities in civilisations over the last 2,500 years.
This would be an excellent primary or supplemental text for a course on urban planning. Since this book is over 25 years old now (which means it before the dot-com bubble), it is interesting to read the last chapter and see how the author envisioned, and underestimated the information age of the early 21st century.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
ملاحظة لي: لم اقرا الكتاب بعد - عن ان المدن الحديثة لا حياة فيها ، وانها تصمم بقصد ابعاد مباهج الحياة والسعادة وذلك بذريعة ترسيخ الامن واستغلال المساحات والاراضي