Description

Book Synopsis
A powerful critique of urban development in greater Johannesburg since the end of apartheid in 1994.

Trade Review
“In this meticulously researched account of Johannesburg’s socio-spatial history, Martin J. Murray gets beneath the surface of the city’s chaotic present to discover the inertia of long-term deployments. He finds that ingrained habits of urban planning and real estate entrepreneurship have always been mobilized in the city as twin mechanisms of change and renewal across moments of territorial mutation. This exposes post-apartheid transformation as a rearticulation of old orders and habits and makes an important contribution to revising the idea of a decisive historical rupture at the end of apartheid.”—Lindsay Bremner, Professor of Architecture, Tyler School of Art, Temple University
“Martin J. Murray navigates the slippery interfaces where mega-development, social progress, dystopian dread, racial enclaving, and mobilities of all kinds intersect, revealing both the alarming disposition of Africa’s most heterogeneous city and a rough-hewn humanity despite the odds. At each step, Murray is precise and impassioned in this no-holds-barred analysis of the lengths to which politicians, business people, planners, entrepreneurs, and developers will go to hold a city down.”—AbdouMaliq Simone, author of For the City Yet to Come: Changing African Life in Four Cities
“This is a book that should be read with attentiveness. It traces the lines of a city in which profound daily violence and suffering coexist with theatrical excess. It shows in convincing breadth that although the living conditions of suburban enclaves and those who dwell in abandoned buildings of the inner city may be ‘worlds apart,’ they are also closely connected to one another, and part of the same historical and economic processes.” -- Matthew Wilhelm-Solomon * Mail & Guardian *
“The political, economic, and social tensions that have accompanied the city’s everchanging urban landscape are on display in this well-researched and penetrating work. . . . City of Extremes is a significant and helpful resource for the study of cities in an era of globalization and urbanization.” -- Travis Vaughn * International Bulletin of Missionary Research *
“[A]n excellent addition to the literature on Johannesburg, and a must-read book for all serious scholars with an interest in the City of Gold.” -- Keith Beavon * Comparativ *

Table of Contents
List of Maps vii
List of Illustrations ix
Preface xi
Acknowledgments xxvii
Abbreviations xxxi
Introduction. Spatial Politics in the Precarious City 1
Part I 23
Making Space: City Building and the Production of the Built Enivronment
1. The Restless Urban Landscape: The Evolving Spatial Geography of Johannesburg 29
2. The Flawed Promise of the High-Modernist City: City Building at the Apex of Apartheid Rule 59
Part II 83
Unraveling Space: Centrifugal Urbanism and the Convulsive City
3. Hollowing out the Center: Johannesburg Turned Inside Out 87
4. Worlds Apart: The Johannesburg Inner City and the Making of the Outcast Ghetto 137
5. The Splintering Metropolis: Laissez-faire Urbanism and Unfettered Suburban Sprawl 173
Part III 205
Fortifying Space: Siege Architecture and Anxious Urbanism
6. Defensive Urbanism after Apartheid: Spatial Partitioning and the New Fortification Aesthetic 213
7. Entrepreneurial Urbanism and the Private City 245
8. Reconciling Arcadia and Utopia: Gated Residential Estates at the Metropolitan Edge 283
Epilogue. Putting Johannesburg in Its Place: The Ordinary City 321
Appendix 333
Notes 337
Bibliography 423
Index 463

City of Extremes

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    A Paperback / softback by Martin J. Murray

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      Publisher: Duke University Press
      Publication Date: Publication Date: 20/06/2011
      ISBN13: 9780822347682, 978-0822347682
      ISBN10: 0822347687

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      A powerful critique of urban development in greater Johannesburg since the end of apartheid in 1994.

      Trade Review
      “In this meticulously researched account of Johannesburg’s socio-spatial history, Martin J. Murray gets beneath the surface of the city’s chaotic present to discover the inertia of long-term deployments. He finds that ingrained habits of urban planning and real estate entrepreneurship have always been mobilized in the city as twin mechanisms of change and renewal across moments of territorial mutation. This exposes post-apartheid transformation as a rearticulation of old orders and habits and makes an important contribution to revising the idea of a decisive historical rupture at the end of apartheid.”—Lindsay Bremner, Professor of Architecture, Tyler School of Art, Temple University
      “Martin J. Murray navigates the slippery interfaces where mega-development, social progress, dystopian dread, racial enclaving, and mobilities of all kinds intersect, revealing both the alarming disposition of Africa’s most heterogeneous city and a rough-hewn humanity despite the odds. At each step, Murray is precise and impassioned in this no-holds-barred analysis of the lengths to which politicians, business people, planners, entrepreneurs, and developers will go to hold a city down.”—AbdouMaliq Simone, author of For the City Yet to Come: Changing African Life in Four Cities
      “This is a book that should be read with attentiveness. It traces the lines of a city in which profound daily violence and suffering coexist with theatrical excess. It shows in convincing breadth that although the living conditions of suburban enclaves and those who dwell in abandoned buildings of the inner city may be ‘worlds apart,’ they are also closely connected to one another, and part of the same historical and economic processes.” -- Matthew Wilhelm-Solomon * Mail & Guardian *
      “The political, economic, and social tensions that have accompanied the city’s everchanging urban landscape are on display in this well-researched and penetrating work. . . . City of Extremes is a significant and helpful resource for the study of cities in an era of globalization and urbanization.” -- Travis Vaughn * International Bulletin of Missionary Research *
      “[A]n excellent addition to the literature on Johannesburg, and a must-read book for all serious scholars with an interest in the City of Gold.” -- Keith Beavon * Comparativ *

      Table of Contents
      List of Maps vii
      List of Illustrations ix
      Preface xi
      Acknowledgments xxvii
      Abbreviations xxxi
      Introduction. Spatial Politics in the Precarious City 1
      Part I 23
      Making Space: City Building and the Production of the Built Enivronment
      1. The Restless Urban Landscape: The Evolving Spatial Geography of Johannesburg 29
      2. The Flawed Promise of the High-Modernist City: City Building at the Apex of Apartheid Rule 59
      Part II 83
      Unraveling Space: Centrifugal Urbanism and the Convulsive City
      3. Hollowing out the Center: Johannesburg Turned Inside Out 87
      4. Worlds Apart: The Johannesburg Inner City and the Making of the Outcast Ghetto 137
      5. The Splintering Metropolis: Laissez-faire Urbanism and Unfettered Suburban Sprawl 173
      Part III 205
      Fortifying Space: Siege Architecture and Anxious Urbanism
      6. Defensive Urbanism after Apartheid: Spatial Partitioning and the New Fortification Aesthetic 213
      7. Entrepreneurial Urbanism and the Private City 245
      8. Reconciling Arcadia and Utopia: Gated Residential Estates at the Metropolitan Edge 283
      Epilogue. Putting Johannesburg in Its Place: The Ordinary City 321
      Appendix 333
      Notes 337
      Bibliography 423
      Index 463

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