Suburbs: A Very Short Introduction

ISBN-10
0197599249
ISBN-13
9780197599242
Category
Suburbs
Pages
160
Language
English
Published
2022-12
Author
Carl Abbott

Description

We live in the suburban era. Well over half of all Americans and two-thirds of Canadians live in suburbs. Tracts of suburban bungalows ring Sydney and Melbourne. Suburban apartments rise on the outskirts of Paris, Prague, Singapore, and Beijing. Nearly everyone has a strong opinion about suburbs. Folks who love dense cities scorn "suburbia," while people who like big yards dislike bustling sidewalks and subways. Social scientists argue whether contemporary suburbs are losing their lustre or if a supposed back-to-the-city trend is a mirage-a debate that has been exacerbated by uncertainty over the effects of COVID-19. Suburbs: A Very Short Introduction tackles two central questions: What is the history behind a suburbanizing world? What does the suburban trend mean for society, politics, and culture? Two chapters describe the ways that the new technologies of streetcars, trains, automobiles, and internet have allowed the compact cities of Britain and the United States to grow into sprawling metropolitan regions. The following chapters explore the vertical suburbs of Europe and East Asia, improvised or do-it-yourself suburbs in both North America Latin America, and suburbs as places of employment. The book concludes by exploring criticism and praise of suburbs in popular sociology, fiction, film, and the Americanization of twenty-first centuries suburbs around the globe. The approach is rooted in history and geography, draws on all the social sciences, and highlights the ways in which suburbs are central to the ways that we understand the present and imagine the future.

Similar books

  • Bewilderness
    By Catherine Black

    Bewilderness explores urban and suburban wildernesses--threshold places--in a darkly comedic, surreal set of prose poems.

  • Postmodern Suburban Spaces: Philosophy, Ethics, and Community in Post-War American Fiction
    By Joseph George

    This book reevaluates fiction devoted to the postwar American suburb, examining the way these works imagine suburbia as a communal structure designed to advance a particular American identity.

  • Changing Suburbs: Foundation, Form, and Function
    By Richard Harris, Peter J. Larkham

    The editors and contributors to this volume demonstrate how suburbs and the meaning of suburbanism change both with time and geographical location."--BOOK JACKET. Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc.

  • Suburbia in the 21st Century: From Dreamscape to Nightmare?
    By Paul J. Maginn, Assistant Professor of Public Policy Katrin B Anacker

    This book explores the evolving social, physical, and economic character of the suburbs and how structural processes, market dynamics, and government policies have shaped and transformed suburbia around the world.