Synopses & Reviews
Using examples from architecture, film, literature, and the visual arts, this wide-ranging book examines the significance of New York City in the urban imaginary between 1890 and 1940. In particular, Imagining New York City considers how and why certain city spaces-such as the skyline, the sidewalk, the slum, and the subway-have come to emblematize key aspects of the modern urban condition. In so doing, Christoph Lindner also considers the ways in which cultural developments in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries set the stage for more recent responses to a variety of urban challenges facing the city, such as post-disaster recovery, the renewal of urban infrastructure, and the remaking of public space.
Review
"This wonderfully rich and engaging book focuses on a transformative period in New York City's history to explore how and why it has so thoroughly captured modern urban imaginations."
--David Pinder, author of Visions of the City: Utopianism, Power and Politics in Twentieth-Century Urbanism
"An exciting and compelling book, Imagining New York City provides a major contribution to the study of cultural Modernism and urban visual culture. With a richly drawn narrative and a deft interweaving of texts and images, this is clearly a first class writer at work."
--Joseph Heathcott, Associate Professor of Urban Studies at The New School and President of the Society for American City and Regional Planning History
"Drawing on a rich array of literary, visual, and urbanistic materials, Christoph Lindner offers an intellectually playful, theoretically incisive guide to the cultural history of modern New York. Taking us up skylines and down sidewalks, Lindner makes it clear that imagining New York has been a crucial way of understanding urban modernity."
--David Scobey, author of Empire City: The Making and Meaning of the New York City Landscape
About the Author
Christoph Lindner writes about cities, visual culture, creative practices, and globalization. He is Professor of Media and Culture at the University of Amsterdam and founding Director of the Netherlands Institute for Cultural Analysis. His previous publications include
Paris-Amsterdam Underground: Essays on Cultural Resistance, Subversion, and Diversion; Globalization, Violence, and the Visual Culture of Cities; Revisioning 007: James Bond and Casino Royale; Urban Space and Cityscapes: Perspectives from Modern and Contemporary Culture; Fictions of Commodity Culture: From the Victorian to the Postmodern; The James Bond Phenomenon: A Critical Reader.Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Archive City
Changing New York
Modern City, Urban Imaginary
Skylines and Sidewalks
After City
Part 1 - Skylines
New York Vertical
The City from Above
Requiem for the Twin Towers
Building the Skyline: A Brief Architectural History
Text and the City
New York Dreamscapes
Fantasy Island
After-Images of New York
Revisioning the Skyscraper
Cinema and the Vertical City
The City from Greenwich Village
Metrotopia
The Empty City
New York Undead
Part 2 - Sidewalks
New York Horizontal
Sidewalks and Public Space
A Short History of the Grid
Street-Walking
Broadway Promenade
Manhattan Flanêuse
Blasé Metropolitan Attitude
City of Slums
Sidewalks and Fear
Tales of the Tenement
New York Underground
Elevated City
High Line, Lowline
Subway City
Underground Fantasies
Slow Street
Afterword
Bibliography