How Cities Won the West How Cities Won the West
Histories of the American Frontier Series

How Cities Won the West

Four Centuries of Urban Change in Western North America

    • $ 89.900,00
    • $ 89.900,00

Descripción editorial

Cities rather than individual pioneers have been the driving force in the settlement and economic development of the western half of North America. Throughout the seventeenth, eighteenth, and nineteenth centuries, western urban centers served as starting points for conquest and settlement. As these frontier cities matured into metropolitan centers, they grew from imitators of eastern culture and outposts of eastern capital into independent sources of economic, cultural, and intellectual change.

From the Gulf of Alaska to the Mississippi River and from the binational metropolis of San Diego-Tijuana to the Prairie Province capitals of Canada, Carl Abbott explores the complex urban history of western Canada and the United States. The evolution of western cities from stations for exploration and military occupation to contemporary entry points for migration and components of a global economy reminds us that it is cities that won the West. And today, as cultural change increasingly moves from west to east, Abbott argues that the urban West represents a new center from which emerging patterns of behavior and changing customs will help to shape North America in the twenty-first century.

GÉNERO
Historia
PUBLICADO
2011
3 de marzo
IDIOMA
EN
Inglés
EXTENSIÓN
358
Páginas
EDITORIAL
University of New Mexico Press
VENDEDOR
Simon & Schuster Digital Sales LLC
TAMAÑO
17.7
MB
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