Monthly Archive for September, 2011
From Misha Lepetic, 3 Quarks Daily
Purpose-built cities are nothing new, especially when an authoritarian government seeks to establish a new capital far from the distractions and chaos of the commercial capital. Recent and well-known examples include Abuja, Naypyidaw and Brasilia, but one can go further back into history to find others: St Petersburg and Washington, D.C. are principal examples from the 18th century, and Ayutthaya was established in 1350 by King U Thong and remained the capital of the Kingdom of Siam until it was razed by the Burmese Army in 1767. Nature has been equally adept at forcing the hand of governments, however: Belmopan, the current capital of Belize, was built following 1961’s Hurricane Hattie, which nearly leveled Belize City (then the capital of British Honduras, if we are to be perfectly accurate in these matters).
Unilaterally decreeing the establishment of a city is not without its risks, of course. The urban form acquires its robustness through a complex, dynamic and unpredictable confluence of people engaging in economic, military and cultural activity. Another crucial ingredient is any city’s contextual relationship to the rest of the world, usually represented by access to either resources or control of valuable trade routes. Thus it is not surprising to learn of the fate of Akhetaten, hardly outlived by its founder, the Pharaoh Akhenaten, father of Tutankhamen. Now known as Amarna, it was founded by Akhenaten’s vision of a society unified through the worship of a single cult, that of the Sun or the Aten. However, 1353 BC proved to be a bit early for the monotheistic worldview, and following Akhenaten’s death both the city and his theological innovation were abandoned within a few years.
From Emma Mustich in Salon.com:
Even if you’ve never visited Detroit, the city’s name might call up an image in your head — perhaps one of the chilling, almost apocalyptic photographs of urban decay that are frequently passed around the Internet.
But that’s hardly the whole picture, as Nancy Barr, curator of “Detroit Revealed: Photographs, 2000-2010″ (which opens next month at the Detroit Institute of Arts), told me this week. In Barr’s eyes — and the eyes of the photographers whose work her show features — Detroit is a city of contradictions, populated by autoworkers and immigrants, optimistic high schoolers and up-all-night-DJs, urban adventurers and sheep.
The 2012 Spaces and Flows Conference will take place in Detroit.
The third issue of Spaces and Flows: An International Journal of Urban and ExtraUrban Studies has now been published.
Volume 1, Issue 3 contains:
- Local Corporatism and Culture-oriented Urban Redevelopment: Transforming a Ferry Terminal into an Art Museum in Ningbo, China by Han Zhang.
- Exclusion or Inclusion through Housing? Understanding Urban Villages in Urban China by Yushu Zhu.
- The Visible Past / Open Context Loosely Coupled Model for Digital Humanities Ubiquitous Collaboration and Publishing: Collaborating Across Print, Mobile, and Online Media by Sorin Adam Matei, Eric Kansa and Nicholas Rauh.
- Drunk with Power: The Politics of Guesthood and Hunger by Tom Galaraga.
- Typological Anatomy of the New Suburban House by Jessica Dixon.
- Tracks and Traces: How the Mobile Phone ‘Fixed’ Driving by Jenny Weight.
- The Iconic and the Charged Field by Christoph Lueder and Ed Wall.
- Large Scale Retail and Small Scale Neighborhoods: A Challenge to Traditional Design by David Bowes.
- Micropolitan Areas and (Counter) Urbanization Processes in the US by Alexander Vias.
- City Artery: The Visual Interrogation of Melbourne’s Regime of Automobility by Ashley Perry.
- Conceptualizing the Meaning of Home for Refugees by Natalia Fadlalla.
- “Maximum City”*: Bombay, Spatial Politics, and Representation by Kalpana Bora and Rohini Mokashi-Punekar.
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