Extraordinary cities millennia of moral syndromes, world-systems and city/state relations

pt. 1. Setting down and setting up -- pt. 2. Narrative I : beginning conjectures -- pt. 3. Narrative II : world-systems -- pt. 4. Narrative III : prospective conjectures : where we are and where are we going?

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Taylor, Peter J.
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Cheltenham, U.K Edward Elgar Pub. Ltd 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:
Collection: Edward Elgar eBook Archive - Collection details see MPG.ReNa
Description
Summary:pt. 1. Setting down and setting up -- pt. 2. Narrative I : beginning conjectures -- pt. 3. Narrative II : world-systems -- pt. 4. Narrative III : prospective conjectures : where we are and where are we going?
This impressive new book provides new insights into why cities succeed or fail. The book is in the class with broadminded presentations like Jared Diamonds book Guns, Germs and Steel. Christian Matthiessen, University of Copenhagen, Denmark and President, International Geographical Unions Commission on Urban Geography This is a "big book" by Peter Taylor. It tells of the extraordinary world-making powers of cities across the ages, it explains why a state-centric social science has constrained recognition of these powers over the last two centuries, and it outlines a new "indisciplinarity" to help us make sense of a human condition increasingly forged out of the urban. Anyone troubled by the social sciences as we know them, ought to read this book. Ash Amin, Cambridge University, UK and author, Land of Strangers Accepting that cities are extraordinary, this book provides an original city-centred narrative of human creativity, past, present and future.
In this innovative, ambitious and wide-ranging book, Peter Taylor demonstrates that cities are the epicenters of human advancement. In exploring cities as sites through which economies flourish, by harnessing the creative potential of myriad communication networks, the author considers cities from varying temporal and spatial perspectives. Four stories of cities are told: the origins of city networks; the domination of cities by world-empires; the genesis of a singular modern creative interval in which innovation culminates in todays globalised cities; and finally, the n ...
Peter J. Taylor has produced a sweeping, empirically grounded, defense of cities as fundamental building blocks of long-term, large scale social structures; a way of freeing social science from state-centric bias; and indeed, mankinds hope. However, the single greatest strength of this complex, seductive, argument is the insistence on treating cities relationally, as process. Here the key to understanding the significance of cities is by studying them in terms of the dynamic networks they form and in their relations to states. Richard E. Lee, Binghamton University, US The founding father of the famous Globalization and World Cities Research Network and think-tank on worldwide links between cities presents this fascinating overview on cities in geohistory. By moving cities to the centre stage, Peter Taylor proposes that concern for states tell only part of the macro-social story of humanity. Cities have been, and are, the engines of innovation.
Physical Description:ix, 424 p
ISBN:9781781954829
9781781954805