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The Living City

Why Cities Don't Need to Be Green to Be Great

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A sociologist explores why “green cities” won’t fix everything—and urges us to celebrate urban life as it is  
Everywhere you look, cities are getting greener. The general assumption is clear: if something is unhealthy or bad about urban life today, then nature holds the cure. However, argues sociologist Des Fitzgerald, green spaces are not the panacea that people think.  
 
In The Living City, Fitzgerald tours the international green city movement that has flourished across the world and discovers the deep, sometimes troubling, roots of our desire to connect cities to nature. Talking to policy makers, planners, scientists, and architects, Fitzgerald suggests that underneath the wish to turn future cities green is another wish: to make the modern city, and perhaps the modern world, disappear altogether. Ultimately, he makes an argument for celebrating the contemporary city as it is—in all its noisy, constructed, artificial glory.   
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      September 18, 2023
      “We’re overinvesting in nature as a panacea for what are actually fairly mundane urban problems,” according to this garbled if intermittently intriguing debut from Fitzgerald, a sociologist at University College Cork. He inveighs against the greening of urban areas (which can consist of planting trees, constructing roof gardens, or opening new parks) but largely sidesteps arguments about the climate benefits and instead takes aim at the moralistic claims of urban planners and architects throughout history. Primary among them is landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted, whom Fitzgerald portrays as a figurehead of the 19th-century movement to build urban parks out of a paternalistic impulse to keep working-class urbanites “physically fit and morally good.” He contends that denigrations of city life as “unnatural” belie the racist and classist underpinnings of anti-urban sentiment, suggesting it instead stems from decades of “telling young and mostly White college students and their parents that the city is, somehow, a dangerous place, a dying place, and, sotto voce, perhaps, increasingly, a too racially diverse place.” Though Fitzgerald makes a provocative point about how class and racial anxieties have fueled disdain of urban areas, it’s unclear whether he’s “against green cities” or rather against their moralizing advocates. There are stimulating ideas here, but the execution feels muddled.

    • Kirkus

      October 1, 2023
      A vivid look at a key controversy in city planning, written for a popular audience. To Fitzgerald, a professor of medical humanities and social sciences, urban planners fixated on the idea that more green spaces makes a better city believed "there was something about our cities that was simply bad for us." Granted, the cities into which humans began flocking after 1800 were crammed, filthy, and wildly unhealthy for anyone except the wealthy. As the century progressed, reforms and technology relieved the worst features, but even today, it remains an accepted belief that crowded cities are sinks of stress and mental illness. By the mid-19th century, planners such as Frederick Law Olmsted had the solution: bring the natural world back into to the city, "so that it was not really a city at all," but rather a massive landscaped park with hundreds of buildings. This "garden city" remains a powerful influence, perhaps epitomized by Le Corbusier's iconic designs, which place citizens in scattered skyscrapers among vast tracts of open land for rest and play, connected by multilane freeways to distant offices and factories. Although Fitzgerald agrees that greenery improves a city's quality of life, he doubts that it exerts "a quasi-religious, even transcendental effect on nearby humans" and worries that "we have given too much weight to people who don't actually like cities very much." That "our buildings should align with complex, natural, evolutionary processes" remains a city planning mantra, and this skeptical overview gives its opponents up-to-date ammunition, although they will likely remain a minority. The classic love letter to the messy, unreformed metropolis remains Jane Jacobs' The Death and Life of Great American Cities, but open-minded readers will relish many of Fitzgerald's interesting arguments in favor of traditional city structure. A lively, opinionated, eminently debatable contribution to a surprisingly bitter debate.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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