Urban redevelopment and modernity in Liverpool and Manchester, 1918-1939
Material type: TextPublication details: Bloomsbury Academic 2016 LondonDescription: xiii, 287 pISBN:- 9781350063839
- 307.34160942 W4U7
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book | Ahmedabad General Stacks | Non-fiction | 307.34160942 W4U7 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 199513 |
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Table of contents
1. Introduction: Urban Transformation in Liverpool and Manchester, 1918-1939
2. Chapter One: “Soaring Skyward”: Urban Regeneration
3. Chapter Two: Civic Week Celebrations
4. Chapter Three: “For Profit or Pleasure”: New Cultures of Retail, Shopping and Consumer Culture
5. Chapter Four: Performing Fashionable Selfhoods in the Transformed City
6. Chapter Five: Gender, Religious Selfhoods and the City
7. Chapter Six: The Cathedral That Never Was?
8. Conclusion: The Second World War and the Challenge to Interwar Urban Culture
Bibliography
Index
Faced with economic decline, unprecedented levels of unemployment and new forms of political extremism during Britain's last great economic crash, politicians and planners in Liverpool and Manchester responded by investing in dramatic and ambitious programmes of urban regeneration. Urban Redevelopment and Modernity in Liverpool and Manchester, 1918-1939 is the first book to provide the hitherto unknown story of the innovative transformation of these cities. Charlotte Wildman challenges academic scholarship in British history, which associates the post-1918 period with the emasculation of local government and the decline of civic culture. She shows that local politicians, planners, architects, businessmen and even religious leaders embraced innovative trends in creating distinct forms of urban modernities, which particularly changed the way women experienced the transformed city. Urban Redevelopment and Modernity in Liverpool and Manchester, 1918-1939 offers a complex, interactive and multipolar interpretation of the ways cities develop, pointing to new methods and ways of understanding both interwar Britain and urban history more generally. At a time of debate and discussion about devolution and decentralisation of government, this book makes an opportune contribution to debates about urban governance and regionalism in contemporary Britain.
https://www.bloomsbury.com/uk/urban-redevelopment-and-modernity-in-liverpool-and-manchester-1918-1939-9781350063839/
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