Suburban urbanities : suburbs and the life of the High street
Registro en:
978-1-910634-17-2
10.14324/111.9781910634134
Autor
Vaughan, Laura
Institución
Resumen
In recent years there has been much debate within urban studies as to
which came first in the evolution of human settlements, the countryside
or the city. There was always a third context to this discussion, however,
and that was the suburb. Life beyond the city walls was a distinctive feature
of ancient urban civilisations from Persia to Minoan Crete, and today in
the Anglophone world the suburban population is a majority. How surprising, then, that few scholars have attempted to understand the nature and
agency of suburban living as a dominant characteristic of human settlements. This was symptomatic of a wider academic indifference and even
hostility towards ‘the suburban’ which has only (ridiculously) recently been
challenged by a new generation of scholars who take suburbs seriously.
Suburban Urbanities is a hugely important contribution to understanding our suburban world. Drawing upon scholarship within the now rapidly
expanding field of suburban studies, synthesising historical geography with
space syntax theories and methods, and the sociology of everyday life, it
sheds new light on the historic and spatial evolution of the city. It shows
that suburbia is not a synchronic caricature of a life-less-lived, but a dynamic
context of metropolitan agency and creativity. As an historic process, suburbanisation is not something that evolved beyond the city to suck the life
out of it, but was intertwined with trajectories of growth, with the socioeconomic patterning and structuring of cities large and small. It is impossible to grasp the meaning of class relations, of gendered lifestyles, of ethnic
segregation and integration, of urban economies and patterns of mobility
and communications, without placing suburbia at the forefront of the analysis. The universality of the themes of Suburban Urbanities is obvious: the
dynamics of growth are significant historically because suburbs are starting
points in change over time, not the end of the line. Old suburbs were once
new, and today’s new suburbs, springing up rapidly across the world, will
one day be old. As dynamic environments they continue to act as vectors of
social, economic and political development, locally, nationally and globally