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THE FORM OF CITIES: POLITICAL ECONOMY AND URBAN DESIGN

By Alexander Cuthbert. Oxford: Blackwell. 2006. [pounds sterling]19.99

This is the second volume in Cuthbert's challenging assault on the conventional wisdom on urban design and the physical determinism that still shapes most designers' approaches to the subject. Cuthbert argues that, after over a century of 'glacial' progress, the architectural thinking that has dominated the field from Camillo Sitte Camillo Sitte (born 17 April 1843, died 16 November 1903 in Vienna) was a noted Austrian architect, painter and city planning theoretician with great influence and authority of the development of urban construction planning and regulation in Europe.  through Gordon Cullen Gordon Cullen (1914-1994) was an English architect. He was an urban designer who carried on the of the Townscape movement theme. Later on he wrote and published Townscape. He was a key motivator and activist in the development of British theories of urban design in the post-war  to David Gosling has yet to yield a satisfactory body of either explanatory or prescriptive theory of urban form. By contrast, '... more significant theoretical paradigms about the shape and form of urban space are originating from outside the discipline of urban design rather than from the inside'. Cuthbert himself stops short of offering a comprehensive theory, but chooses instead to delineate the diverse nature and sources of knowledge upon which an effective explanation and set of guiding principles must be based. In the first book, Designing Cities, by the same publishers, Cuthbert grouped a list of essential readings from both old and new related disciplines into 10 sections: Theory; History; Philosophy; Politics; Culture; Gender; Environment; Aesthetics; Typologies, and Pragmatics pragmatics

In linguistics and philosophy, the study of the use of natural language in communication; more generally, the study of the relations between languages and their users.
. The new book follows an identical structure to facilitate cross-referencing between the two volumes but offers a more personal evaluation of the key ideas and ideologies which Cuthbert believes show the way forward. Underpinning these, and indeed the whole book, is a socio-economic perspective--spatial political economy--the most influential spokesmen for which include the radical sociologist Manuel Castells Manuel Castells (full Spanish name: Manuel Castells Oliván[1]; born 1942 in Hellín, Albacete, Spain) is a sociologist, particularly associated with research into the information society and communications. . Like Castells, Cuthbert is primarily concerned with the 'social production of space', in all 'its material and symbolic dimensions'. In place of heroic fantasies Heroic fantasy is a sub-genre of fantasy literature which chronicles the tales of heroes and their conquests in imaginary lands. Stories tend to be intricate in plot, often involving many peoples, nations and lands.  of omnipotent individual designers shaping cities, Cuthbert presents an infinitely more complex and realistic picture of multiple urban players and interest groups competing over the same territory for different motives. Dense and scrupulously scru·pu·lous  
adj.
1. Conscientious and exact; painstaking. See Synonyms at meticulous.

2. Having scruples; principled.
 researched, Cuthbert's work provides a vital and readable overview of the emergent new insights into urban form and culture.

Book reviews from The Architectural Review The Architectural Review is a monthly international architectural magazine published in London since 1896. Articles cover the built environment which includes landscape, building design, interior design and urbanism as well as theory of these subjects.  can now be seen on our website at www.arplus.com and the books can be ordered online, many at special discount.
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Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:The Form of Cities: Political Economy and Urban Design
Author:Abel, Chris
Publication:The Architectural Review
Article Type:Book review
Date:Oct 1, 2006
Words:352
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