Stalinist City Planning Stalinist City Planning

Stalinist City Planning

Professionals, Performance, and Power

    • €49.99
    • €49.99

Publisher Description

Based on research in previously closed Soviet archives, this book sheds light on the formative years of Soviet city planning and on state efforts to consolidate power through cityscape design. Stepping away from Moscow's central corridors of power, Heather D. DeHaan focuses her study on 1930s Nizhnii Novgorod, where planners struggled to accommodate the expectations of a Stalinizing state without sacrificing professional authority and power.

Bridging institutional and cultural history, the book brings together a variety of elements of socialism as enacted by planners on a competitive urban stage, such as scientific debate, the crafting of symbolic landscapes, and state campaigns for the development of cultured cities and people. By examining how planners and other urban inhabitants experienced, lived, and struggled with socialism and Stalinism, DeHaan offers readers a much broader, more complex picture of planning and planners than has been revealed to date.

GENRE
History
RELEASED
2013
28 May
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
272
Pages
PUBLISHER
University of Toronto Press, Scholarly Publishing Division
SIZE
8.4
MB

More Books Like This

Historical Sociology and Eastern European Development Historical Sociology and Eastern European Development
2009
A Short History Of Soviet Socialism A Short History Of Soviet Socialism
2003
Between Tsar and People Between Tsar and People
2021
Circulatory Localities: The Example of Stalinism in the 1930S (Essay) Circulatory Localities: The Example of Stalinism in the 1930S (Essay)
2010
Stratification Without Class (Critical Essay) Stratification Without Class (Critical Essay)
2007
The Central Workers' Circle of St. Petersburg, 1889-1894 The Central Workers' Circle of St. Petersburg, 1889-1894
2017