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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Ocean Howell , A01Publisher: The University of Chicago Press Imprint: University of Chicago Press Dimensions: Width: 1.60cm , Height: 0.30cm , Length: 2.30cm Weight: 0.709kg ISBN: 9780226141398ISBN 10: 022614139 Pages: 400 Publication Date: 17 November 2015 Audience: College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock ![]() The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsReviewsA deeply researched, beautifully written and illustrated, and timely account of how the people and institutions of the Mission district have influenced the long-term development of the city of San Francisco. Howell has made a major contribution to both American urban history and California urban studies with his highly original addition to the increasingly sophisticated bibliography of San Francisco history. Everyone interested in the City by the Golden Gate from the early twentieth century to the present will want a copy of this book. --William Issel author of San Francisco, 1865-1932: Politics, Power, and Urban Development Howell recounts a rapid transformation of the district that seemed to surround Mission Dolores and then almost swallow it. Highly recommended. --Choice The Mission's pre-1960's history has rarely been chronicled and Howell makes a significant contribution to our understanding of this period. He shows how strongly the Mission identified as a working-class community, seeing itself as almost a separate city from the rest of San Francisco (a spirit that hasn't changed). --BeyondChron An important study about the nature of neighborhoods --Southern California Quarterly Do cities make neighborhoods or do neighborhoods make cities? In this masterful synthesis of politics, culture and the built environment, Howell makes a powerful case for the role of small-scale social formations in the making of the civic whole. As San Francisco's Mission District emerges as the latest symbol of gentrification and its discontents, this study should not be missed. --Eric Avila, University of California, Los Angeles The book provides an important historical perspective on the exceptional ability of the Mission to meet externally directed development pressures with locally organized resistance. . .Planning historians will draw valuable insights. --Planning Perspectives Using the neighborhood-oriented approach that he champions, Howell has been able to approach the issues of local power, planning, class, and race with a contextual sensitivity that is often missing in more macro studies. This allows him to make important nuanced observations that will force readers to rethink how they approach their subsequent teaching and research. Making the Mission will challenge readers' assumptions about the complex relationships that shape neighborhoods, cities, and metropolitan areas; ethnic and racial relations; urban planning and governmental and citizen involvement in it; and the historical narratives that have come to dominate each of these. --Janice L. Reiff, University of California, Los Angeles San Francisco's Mission district deserves this sophisticated and fascinating history. Howell offers a rare frame for seeing an entire city through the lens of a single neighborhood. Making the Mission remaps the dynamics of power, planning, center and periphery, for U.S. cities in the twentieth century. --Alison Isenberg, author of Downtown America: A History of Place and the People Who Made It Howell reminds us what can be gained by zooming in on the map. Making the Mission is, in some ways, a classic neighborhood study, documenting change over time in one of San Francisco's most famous districts. But the book is less a study of the Mission itself and more an examination of its unusual influence over neighborhood (and even citywide) planning. . . . [Howell] succeeds in challenging urban historians to go back to the neighborhood. --Pacific Historical Review Making the Mission offers a provocative history of neighborhood power and urban planning. This elegantly written and beautifully illustrated book reveals that modern-day fights against gentrification are rooted in neighborhood ideas and institutions stretching back to the early twentieth century. Howell's sweeping narrative shows that neighborhoods often shaped and even directed the planning policies of city hall and the federal government. The neighborhood was a central 'actor' in the development of space and formation of race. Howell's history leaves us with important lessons about the opportunities and obstacles facing today's campaigns for neighborhood self-governance. --Christopher Agee author of The Streets of San Francisco: Policing and the Creation of a Cosmopolitan Liberal Politics Ocean Howell is assistant professor of history in the Clark Honors College and the Department of the History of Art and Architecture at the University of Oregon. Author InformationOcean Howell is assistant professor of history in the Clark Honors College and the Department of the History of Art and Architecture at the University of Oregon. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |