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The Eclipse of Urbanism and the Greening of Public Space - Image Making and the Search for a Commons in the United States 1682-1865 (Hardcover)
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The Eclipse of Urbanism and the Greening of Public Space - Image Making and the Search for a Commons in the United States 1682-1865 (Hardcover)
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The question of how environmental awareness originated and
developed has been subject to sharply contesting points of view.
Recently the debate has been expressed epistemologically in
constructivist versus materialist approaches. In this book, Mark
Luccarelli pushes past unproductive mind/body debates by rooting
the rise of environmental awareness in the political and
geographical history of the US. Considering history in terms of the
categorical development of space - social, territorial and
conceptual - the book examines the forces that drove people to
ignore their surroundings by distancing culture from place and by
assiduously advancing the dissolution of social bonds. Thus beneath
the question of the surround, and the key to its renewal today, is
the quest to re-engage the common. The latter is still a part of
the approach to space, its arrangement and disposition, and has a
necessary environmental dimension.Concepts of urbanism, place
identity, picturesque landscape and nature are part of a larger
Western intellectual and cultural context but, by examining the
imaging of cities and landscape, Luccarelli links particular
American geographic settings - as well as the political ideals and
practices of the republic - to the application and aesthetic
reading of these ideas. The advocates of these various perspectives
shared an aesthetic orientation as a means of redefining or
recovering the common. The book looks at various American urban and
regional contexts, as well as the work of artists, writers and
public figures, including painter and engraver William Birch,
Thomas Jefferson, engraver John Hill, Henry David Thoreau and
Frederick Law Olmsted. Luccarelli embeds his environmental study in
the works of these men and in the course of American history
between the planting of the city of Philadelphia and the
establishment of Olmsted's major urban parks.
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