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Earthopolis

Earthopolis
Author: Carl H. Nightingale
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 825
Release: 2022-06-09
Genre: History
ISBN: 1108645380

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This is a biography of Earthopolis, the only Urban Planet we know of. It is a history of how cities gave humans immense power over Earth, for good and for ill. Carl Nightingale takes readers on a sweeping six-continent, six-millennia tour of the world's cities, culminating in the last 250 years, when we vastly accelerated our planetary realms of action, habitat, and impact, courting dangerous new consequences and opening prospects for new hope. In Earthopolis we peek into our cities' homes, neighborhoods, streets, shops, eating houses, squares, marketplaces, religious sites, schools, universities, offices, monuments, docklands, and airports to discover connections between small spaces and the largest things we have built. The book exposes the Urban Planet's deep inequalities of power, wealth, access to knowledge, class, race, gender, sexuality, religion and nation. It asks us to draw on the most just and democratic moments of Earthopolis's past to rescue its future.


Earthopolis

Earthopolis
Author: Carl H. Nightingale
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 825
Release: 2022-06-09
Genre: History
ISBN: 110842452X

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A panoramic study of our Urban Planet that takes readers on a six-continent, six-millennia tour of the world's cities.


Earthopolis

Earthopolis
Author: Carl Husemoller Nightingale
Publisher:
Total Pages: 810
Release: 2022
Genre: Cities and towns
ISBN: 9781108440530

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This is a biography of Earthopolis, the only Urban Planet we know of. It is a history of how cities gave humans immense power over Earth, for good and for ill. Carl Nightingale takes readers on a sweeping six-continent, six-millennia tour of the world's cities, culminating in the last 250 years, when we vastly accelerated our planetary realms of action, habitat, and impact, courting dangerous new consequences and opening prospects for new hope. In Earthopolis we peek into our cities' homes, neighborhoods, streets, shops, eating houses, squares, marketplaces, religious sites, schools, universities, offices, monuments, docklands, and airports to discover connections between small spaces and the largest things we have built. The book exposes the Urban Planet's deep inequalities of power, wealth, access to knowledge, class, race, gender, sexuality, religion and nation. It asks us to draw on the most just and democratic moments of Earthopolis's past to rescue its future.


Our Urban Planet in Theory and History

Our Urban Planet in Theory and History
Author: Carl Nightingale
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 156
Release: 2024-06-06
Genre: History
ISBN: 1009321765

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This Element offers seven propositions toward a theory of 'Our Urban Planet' that is useful to global urban historians. I argue that historians have much to offer to theorists particularly those involved in debates over planetary urbanization theory and the Anthropocene. We must enlarge our concept of 'urban' to include spaces that make cities possible and that cities make possible and become comfortable with longer temporal frames that nest global urban history within Earth Time. Above all we need to add the crucial dimension of power, redefining cities as spaces that humans produce to amplify harvests of geo-solar energy and deploy human power within space and time. The element uses insights from 'deep history' to set the stage for a 'theory by verb' elaborating the many paradoxes of humans' 6,000-year gamble with the Urban Condition and explaining cities' own intrinsic capacity to outrun their own theorizability.


The Law Times

The Law Times
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 620
Release: 1877
Genre: Law
ISBN:

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Homonovus

Homonovus
Author: Fred Richards
Publisher:
Total Pages: 212
Release: 1973
Genre: Anthropology
ISBN: 9780883100011

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Real Estate and Global Urban History

Real Estate and Global Urban History
Author: Alexia Yates
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 146
Release: 2021-08-26
Genre: History
ISBN: 1108851762

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Capitalist private property in land and buildings – real estate – is the ground of modern cities, materially, politically, and economically. It is foundational to their development and core to much theoretical work on the urban environment. It is also a central, pressing matter of political contestation in contemporary cities. Yet it remains largely without a history. This Element examines the modern city as a propertied space, defining real estate as a technology of (dis)possession and using it to move across scales of analysis, from the local spatiality of particular built spaces to the networks of legal, political, and economic imperatives that constitute property and operate at national and international levels. This combination of territorial embeddedness with more wide-ranging institutional relationships charts a route to an urban history that allows the city to speak as a global agent and artefact without dispensing with the role of states and local circumstance.


Citizens without Nations

Citizens without Nations
Author: Maarten Prak
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2018-08-16
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781107504158

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Citizenship is at the heart of our contemporary world but it is a particular vision of national citizenship forged in the French Revolution. In Citizens without Nations, Maarten Prak recovers the much longer tradition of urban citizenship across the medieval and early modern world. Ranging from Europe and the American colonies to China and the Middle East, he reveals how the role of 'ordinary people' in urban politics has been systematically underestimated and how civic institutions such as neighbourhood associations, craft guilds, confraternities and civic militias helped shape local and state politics. By destroying this local form of citizenship, the French Revolution initially made Europe less, rather than more democratic. Understanding citizenship's longer-term history allows us to change the way we conceive of its future, rethink what it is that makes some societies more successful than others, and whether there are fundamental differences between European and non-European societies.


The Next Batman: Second Son (2021-) #2

The Next Batman: Second Son (2021-) #2
Author: John Ridley
Publisher: DC Comics
Total Pages: 23
Release: 2021-03-02
Genre: Comics & Graphic Novels
ISBN:

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Tim “Jace” Fox has returned home following the tragic events of Joker War and Lucius Fox taking full control of the massive Wayne fortune. While his mother and sisters greet Jace, his younger brother had a prior engagement with an armed madman—as BATWING! The adventure continues in this exciting series as readers will come to know the man who will become a Dark Knight!