1 / 23

Images of Urban Life

Images of Urban Life. Utopia is often described in terms of a specific place or space and that space is often a city. Why a city? .

read
Download Presentation

Images of Urban Life

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Images of Urban Life Utopia is often described in terms of a specific place or space and that space is often a city. Why a city?

  2. 1. Manageable. We can’t make Nevada a Utopia, but we could perhaps make a city a utopia. Neither Aristotle nor Plato could conceive of a society that overpassed the bounds of the city: none of them could embrace a muli-national or poly-cultured community.

  3. 2. Mumford argues that the city has the advantage of mirroring the complexities of society. 3. Before the notion of sovereign countries there was the notion of the city-state. In a way Athens was Greece, Rome was Italy. So historically the 1st visualizations of a utopia were at the city, local or community level.

  4. Lewis Mumford Where does Mumford start his historical analysis of the Utopia?

  5. Plato’s Republic Where does Mumford suggest Plato got his ideas and inspiration regarding his discussion of the city?

  6. Characteristics of Utopia King/Lord (city is the creation of the king) Military – prepared for war Utopia = paradise = perfection = blessed = God-Temple Manufactured-not spontaneous – a human artifact Authoritarian (censorship; control of human breeding) – you need to control the masses to make a utopia.

  7. Division of labor (class divisions/slavery) Protected from threats from within and from without Static - Immune to change (logical – if you reach perfection, no-need for change). Homogenous (religious, ethnic, etc.) Isolation, stratification, fixation, regimentation, standardization, militarization

  8. Notions of the Machine The collective human machine: controlled by the king with a vision. Invisible Machine: the masses utilized/controlled by the leader to build and shape the city Labor machine; military machine Technology –we still need people but not in masses – hi tech – blade runner- star trek; Orwell

  9. The Urban Machine Link between the city and technology (the machine - industrial revolution) Metropolis/Bladerunner – Technological revolution. Two classes: off worlders/on worlders. Live above/below. Link between city, technology and loss of humanity The encroachment of the machine into the pastoral life

  10. Moral of the Story? Every utopia is almost by definition a sterile desert, unfit for human occupation. The article makes us think about (quoting Aristotle) “consider what form of political community is the best of all for those who are most able to realize their ideal life.” What institutions, structures will maximize our potential, help actualize our ideals? The notion that the power of human design to alter natural conditions and customary practices. Designing human behavior.

  11. Modern Utopia? Mumford presents a classic conception of a utopian society – what would be a modern conception of utopia? Would a modern conception of a utopia be very different or share similar characteristics as the classic.

  12. Is the City the place to create a modern utopia? Yanarella ask wether the city a magnet or a container? Marx believed urban development was essential for the socialist utopia he dreamed about. Weber suggests that the city is no longer an important social phenomenon since it was stripped of its political and economic autonomy.

  13. Utopia and Social Diverserity Lewis Wirth’s seminal article on “Urbanism as a Way of Life” (1938) anticipates the tensions posed by increasing social heterogeneity within the confines of fixed, urban places

  14. Standard economic theory also suggests that for local public goods (Tiebout, 1956) there exist markets that are more efficiently provided by homogeneous groups, since larger, socially more heterogeneous jurisdictions will have greater diversity in public service tastes and disagreement (i.e., conflict) over policy preferences.

  15. So what is the solution? Segregation? Is there anything good about social diversity?

  16. Ecological Differentiation Definition: Concentrated poverty, segregation, and differences of social capital. Why is this bad?

  17. What happens when people do not have a stake in the larger community? not a problem if you are in an gated and self-sustained environment and don't have to leave. Gated communities just push crime to an adjacent area.

  18. What Causes Ecological Differentiation? Bickford’s argument: Our desire for safety, order, homogeneity is not necessarily natural or self-determined but rather there are exogenous factors that influence our desire for such things: Media Parents Friends INSTITUTIONS

  19. Utopia = social engineering? Some political/policy decisions make segregation worse. "The world is being constructed, quite literally, in ways that adversely affect how we regard politics and who we recognize as fellow citizens".

  20. Examples 1) Economic development policies that promote gentrification (the ousting of poor so that the land can be used by businesses). Eminent domain. 2) transportation: highways over alternatives (San Diego trolley example) 3) minimum sized lots 4) no sidewalks 5) Breaking up the CCSD

  21. Social Regulation Public vs. Private - what is public?; what is private? The definition of privacy is a power struggle: The private is political. The owners of shopping mall want public tax dollars to help them build their mall and to help maintain the roads and expand the freeways and want police protection but they want the right to say this is private property and we can exclude anyone we want. Prunyard decision 1980. Semi-Public space.

  22. Who do you trust to make the decisions regarding our community? • Public Institutions • Private Individuals, Private Organizations

  23. PUBLIC V. PRIVATE DECISIONS Bickford makes a good point - we want government to butt out and let us make our own choices but in reality we aren't really making any choices. We are simply substituting one authority over another. Her example is the CID (common interest development) or PUD (planned unit development).

More Related