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The Humanities in City Planning

Culture, Uncertainty, and Visuality

Martin Krieger

$284

Hardback

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English
Routledge
28 October 2024
This book by preeminent planning theorist Martin H. Krieger explores how cities are much more than their economies, demographies, or geographies. Planning today is dominated by social science, but Kreiger takes a different approach, thinking of city planning in terms of Culture, Uncertainty, and Visuality. The chapters explore planners and their role as protagonist in the humanities of literature and history; the inevitability of uncertainty in planning and how to face it; and how to attend to the physical, visual, and aural environment of the city. Through a series of essays, Krieger shows that cities are cultural and meaningful, that they are contingent and so filled with opportunity, and that they are concrete, particular, and encountered. The Humanities in City Planning will be of interest to students and scholars of the humanities and planning looking for alternative ways of viewing the city.
By:  
Imprint:   Routledge
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 198mm,  Width: 129mm, 
Weight:   489g
ISBN:   9781032755229
ISBN 10:   1032755229
Pages:   164
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Primary ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Preface: Why the Humanities? Part I 1. What Does Jerusalem Have To Do With Athens? 2. Arguments from Design 3. On Syzygy Street: The City in Analogy 4. The City in Gravity Part II 5. Riding Uncertainty 6. Courage as a Resource 7. Clutch or Choke: Making Your Own Luck 8. The Counsel of Probability 9. Taming Contingency:Statistics,Fortune,and History Part II 10. Seeing and Hearing Appendix Bibliography

Martin H. Krieger was professor, emeritus, at the Sol Price School of Public Policy of the University of Southern California. He taught at Berkeley, Minnesota, MIT, and Michigan, and was a fellow at the National Humanities Center and at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences. He was a fellow of the American Physical Society. Martin Krieger passed away in 2024.

Reviews for The Humanities in City Planning: Culture, Uncertainty, and Visuality

"""To govern democratically requires maneuvering among diverse passions and interests. Throgmorton deftly brings his readers into the midst of the delicate balances that must be negotiated so that cities can be effectively and justly governed. Co-Crafting the Just City is an impressive capstone to a career spent exploring the many pathways to the practices of progressive and democratic change."" Robert A. Beauregard, Professor Emeritus, Columbia University, USA ""This insightful and complex account reveals how Jim Throgmorton struggled with class and economic inequalities, and with racial and cultural politics too, to craft a more inclusive, resilient and just city."" John Forester, Professor, Cornell University, USA ""This book provides a much needed insiders’ view in political decision-making in a relatively small American city. The fine-grained story illustrates how a mayor with a planning background was instrumental in crafting the city’s future for the benefit of ordinary citizens."" Louis Albrechts, Emeritus Professor of Planning, University of Leuven, Belgium ""This is a really valuable record, not just of the life of a Councillor and Mayor, but of the mechanics and dynamics of small town city government in the US. Throgmorton shows through his experience how cities are constructed through multiple webs of relations, and highlights the importance of building relationships and networks if new ideas and ways of working are to become established practices."" Patsy Healey, Emeritus Professor of Planning, Newcastle University, UK"


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