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OverviewThe comparative presentation of the birth of metropolises like St. Petersburg, Helsinki, Kiev, Belgrade, or Athens confirms the importance of the Western model as well as the influence of international experts on city planning at the periphery of Europe. In addition, this volume presents an alternative perspective that aims to understand the genesis of Eastern European cities with a metropolitan character or metropolitan aspirations as a process sui generis. The rapid expansion of metropolitan cities such as London and Paris began in the 17th and 18th centuries. Large parts of Central and Eastern Europe underwent urbanization and industrialization with considerable delay. Nevertheless beginning in the second half of the 19th century, the towns in the Romanov and Habsburg empires, as well as in the Balkans grew into cities and metropolitan areas. They changed at an astonishing pace. This transformation has long been interpreted as an attempt to overcome the economic and cultural backwardness of the region and to catch up to Western Europe. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Jan C. Behrends , Martin KohlrauschPublisher: Central European University Press Imprint: Central European University Press Dimensions: Width: 21.60cm , Height: 2.40cm , Length: 14.00cm Weight: 0.572kg ISBN: 9789633860359ISBN 10: 9633860350 Pages: 370 Publication Date: 20 July 2014 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 Contents1. Introduction 2. The social and the national question in the Eastern metropolis; Steinberg Modernity as Mask: Reality, Appearance, and Knowledge on the Petersburg Street; Hillis Modernist Visions and Mass Politics in Late Imperial Kiev; Behrends Modern Moscow: Russia's Metropolis and the State from Tsarism to Stalinism; Weeks Creating Polish Wilno 1919-1939 3. Urbanism goes east: the development of capitals, infrastructure, and planning; Bastea Athens 1890 - 1940: Transitory Modernism and National Realities; Stojanovic Between Rivalry, Irrationality, and Resistance: The Modernization of Belgrade, 1890-1914; Stanoeva Architectural Praxis in Sofia: The Changing Perception of ""Oriental"" Urbanity and ""European"" Urbanism (1879-1940); Kohlrausch Warszawa Funkcjonalna: Radical Urbanism and the International Discourse on Planning in the Interwar Period; 4. Ostmoderne? East European modernism; Mansbach Capital Modernism: Kaunas's Architecture for a New Lithuania; Kolbe Helsinki: Shaping an Imperial or National Capital City? Blau Modernizing Zagreb: The Freedom of the Periphery 5. Bibliography 6. List of ContributorsReviews""...this work is a convincing read that greatly adds to our understanding of urban developments in semi-peripheral regions."" * European History Quarterly * ""The 'race to modernity,' as the editors of this excellent collection of case studies put it, was frequently an effort to catch up, to overcome the apparent backwardness of their situation in a rapidly changing global climate, and to become, in the parlance of the day, more 'European.' But, as Jan Behrends and Martin Kohlrausch also argue, the experience of modernity was by no means unilinear and nor were the conditions in which these cities modernized the same. The cities described in this volume, which range from Helsinki, St. Petersburg, Tallinn, Riga, Kaunas, Moscow, Wilno, Warsaw, and Kyiv in the north to Zagreb, Belgrade, Sofia, and Athens in the south, exhibited alternate manifestations of modernity, from suspicion and botched planning to various creative strategies that took advantage of their peripheral position."" * Slavic Review * ""Die Lektüre des Bandes „Races to Modernity"" ist sehr zu empfehlen, möchte man sich über architektonisch-urbanistische Praxis, Symbolpolitik und den Modernediskurs im Zuge der Staatenbildung in den jeweiligen Ländern – oder, ja, in der Region östlich eines wie auch immer einzugrenzenden Westens – informieren. Die sehr umfangreich und sorgfältig recherchierten Beiträge dienen als guter Ausgangspunkt für weitere Recherchen. Darüber hinaus ist der Band anschaulich illustriert und ansprechend gestaltet. Das insgesamt hohe Niveau der einzelnen Beiträge und die vielen Ausschläge nach oben lassen dann auch einige etwas schwächere Teile nicht ins Gewicht fallen und schmälern den großen Mehrwert keineswegs."" * Polenstudien. Interdisziplinär Fachinformation und internationaler Austausch * ""The title of this collection accurately reflects the book's overarching emphasis: modernity as a goal for Eastern European cities, and for many of these cities, the race to develop a modern city, often a capital city. Following an excellent introduction by the editors, the essays divide into three parts. The first examines urban development to reveal the national aspirations and social turmoil of pre- and post-imperial Moscow, Kiev, Wilno, and Petersburg. The second examines Athens, Belgrade, Sofia, and Warsaw as new capital cities attempting to reflect the modern idea of centralized control over their new nations. Kaunas, Talinn, Riga, Helsinki, and Zagreb provide the background for essays that actively question the meaning of modernity in the urban capitals of the East. The authors' use of modernity as a cohesive theme is commendable. Modernity, however, has many different meanings, as revealed in the essays themselves. While all of the essays are in American English, most of the sources are (quite naturally) in a variety of languages. Summing up: Highly recommended"" * Choice * ...this work is a convincing read that greatly adds to our understanding of urban developments in semi-peripheral regions. * European History Quarterly * The 'race to modernity,' as the editors of this excellent collection of case studies put it, was frequently an effort to catch up, to overcome the apparent backwardness of their situation in a rapidly changing global climate, and to become, in the parlance of the day, more 'European.' But, as Jan Behrends and Martin Kohlrausch also argue, the experience of modernity was by no means unilinear and nor were the conditions in which these cities modernized the same. The cities described in this volume, which range from Helsinki, St. Petersburg, Tallinn, Riga, Kaunas, Moscow, Wilno, Warsaw, and Kyiv in the north to Zagreb, Belgrade, Sofia, and Athens in the south, exhibited alternate manifestations of modernity, from suspicion and botched planning to various creative strategies that took advantage of their peripheral position. * Slavic Review * Die Lekture des Bandes Races to Modernity ist sehr zu empfehlen, moechte man sich uber architektonisch-urbanistische Praxis, Symbolpolitik und den Modernediskurs im Zuge der Staatenbildung in den jeweiligen Landern - oder, ja, in der Region oestlich eines wie auch immer einzugrenzenden Westens - informieren. Die sehr umfangreich und sorgfaltig recherchierten Beitrage dienen als guter Ausgangspunkt fur weitere Recherchen. Daruber hinaus ist der Band anschaulich illustriert und ansprechend gestaltet. Das insgesamt hohe Niveau der einzelnen Beitrage und die vielen Ausschlage nach oben lassen dann auch einige etwas schwachere Teile nicht ins Gewicht fallen und schmalern den grossen Mehrwert keineswegs. * Polenstudien. Interdisziplinar Fachinformation und internationaler Austausch * The title of this collection accurately reflects the book's overarching emphasis: modernity as a goal for Eastern European cities, and for many of these cities, the race to develop a modern city, often a capital city. Following an excellent introduction by the editors, the essays divide into three parts. The first examines urban development to reveal the national aspirations and social turmoil of pre- and post-imperial Moscow, Kiev, Wilno, and Petersburg. The second examines Athens, Belgrade, Sofia, and Warsaw as new capital cities attempting to reflect the modern idea of centralized control over their new nations. Kaunas, Talinn, Riga, Helsinki, and Zagreb provide the background for essays that actively question the meaning of modernity in the urban capitals of the East. The authors' use of modernity as a cohesive theme is commendable. Modernity, however, has many different meanings, as revealed in the essays themselves. While all of the essays are in American English, most of the sources are (quite naturally) in a variety of languages. Summing up: Highly recommended * Choice * Author InformationJan C. Behrends, Centre for Contemporary History (ZZF), Potsdam, teaches East European History at Humboldt University, Berlin. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |