Public 43 Winter 2011 Suburbs
£8.00
5 Available
ISBN
MPUBLIC043
Public 43 Winter 2011 Suburbs is available to buy in increments of 1
HISTORICAL DOSSIER
John Archer, ‘Everyday Suburbia: Lives and Practices’
Stephen W. Sawyer, ‘Anting or the Antinomies of Exurban Development in Shanghai’
Chris Richardson, ‘Defining Suburbs: Representation and Symbolic Violence Just Outside the City’
Roger Keil, ‘Global Suburbanization: The Challenge of Researching Cities in the 21st Century’
Karen Bermann and Isabella Clough Marinaro, ‘Exclusivity and Exclusion: Roma Camps and the Degypsification of the Roman Urbs’
Douglas Young, ‘Hyper-development or Nothing to do: Urban Planning in Toronto’s In-between City’
Maria Whiteman, ‘Hiking the Suburbs’
Beatriz Colomina, ‘Mourning the Suburbs: Learning from Levittown’
Interview of Saskia Sassen, by Geoffrey Guy
Ondine Park, ‘Ambivalence and Strangeness in the Everyday Utopianism of Suburbia’
Cecilia Chen, ‘Ethnoburbs and Pacific Mall’
Ian Robinson, ‘The Political Aesthetics of the Urban Periphery and Pedro Costa’s Colossal Youth’
Alberto Pérez-Gómez, ‘Architecture: The Space of Participation’
COLUMN
Ian Balfour, ‘Suburbs of the Mind’
REVIEWS
Sarah E. K. Smith, ‘Imagining Resistance: Visual Culture and Activism in Canada,’ edited by J. Keri Cronin and Kirsty Robertson (Wilfrid Laurier University Press, 2011)
Kate Wells, ‘Reimagining Detroit: Opportunities for Redefining the American City,‘ by John Gallagher (Wayne State University Press, 2010)
Bev Kelly, Robert Hengeveld’s Amped UP, at Latcham Gallery (2011)
Cynthia Roberts, Neighbourhood Maverick, at Harbourfront Centre (2011)
Weight | 0.932000 |
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Binding | Magazine |
Pages | 152 |
Date Published | 2011-09-08 00:00:00 |
ISBN13/Barcode | 7720068636294 |
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Publisher | PUBLIC: Art | Culture | Ideas |
This issue of PUBLIC explores the suburbs as dwelling in transition, as utopian vision, a way of life, a built form and as a significant economic and political dimension of the global phenomenon of urbanization. By suggesting transition as an appropriate trope for the critical examination of suburbs, past, present and future, this issue points to changing forms, locations, ideologies, and narratives. Turn the issue around to find a complete 112-page full-colour catalogue for The Leona Drive Project including artist statements and a visual archive of the projects that made up the event.