Description

Book Synopsis
Fluid New York offers reflections on how New York began to incorporate the city's archipelago ecology into plans for a livable and sustainable future in the decade between September 11 and Hurricane Sandy.

Trade Review
“Joseph addresses vital topics like city planning for ecological sustainability and how the city must meet the needs of a heterogeneous population. . . . Joseph expresses both affection and concern for her city, highlighting both its creative potential and provincial hubris it must outgrow.” - Publishers Weekly
“I relished Joseph’s vivid accounts of New Yorkers’ communal campaigns against the wanton destruction of urban green spaces that had been a source of pleasure, solace and inspiration to citizens for many decades. She demonstrates that environmental challenges bring people together, no matter how disparate and apparently divided the population of a large city may seem to be. . . . [I]t speaks powerfully to a critical moment in urban ecology.” - Laurence Coupe, Times Higher
“A tour-de-force, Fluid New York should be read and absorbed by anyone interested in how urbanism has recently developed along with ecology and how it continues to evolve within an ecological context.” - Jim Elledge, The Mom Egg
"Fluid New York is a beautifully written and conceived book. Based on rich ethnographic material, May Joseph develops a persuasive vision of New York as a city with an emerging culture of 'fluid urbanism.' Her compelling arguments offer a way to rethink space and performative cultures in cities such as Bangalore, Beijing, and Dar es Salaam, and to put New York in dialogue with those cities and their urbanisms. This is wonderful, vivid, and insightful work."—Smriti Srinivas, author of Landscapes of Urban Memory and In the Presence of Sai Baba
"This important book illuminates new ideas that took hold of the bodies and minds of New Yorkers in the decade after September 11. May Joseph's New York is characterized by the radical implosion and intensification of global difference. Her narrative consistently gives voice to people who have always been present in New York but not often heard from."—Brian McGrath, Research Chair in Urban Design, Parsons The New School for Design
"Gorgeously written and keenly observed, Joseph’s book evokes both the global and the local in her consideration of New York City’s evolving relationship to its waterfront. . . . This vast book and its singular story reveal the pleasures of cosmopolitan belonging, as well as the difficult measures that must be taken to preserve urban settings and citizens on a warming planet." -- Jennie Lightweis-Goff * Journal of American Culture *
“Joseph addresses vital topics like city planning for ecological sustainability and how the city must meet the needs of a heterogeneous population. . . . Joseph expresses both affection and concern for her city, highlighting both its creative potential and provincial hubris it must outgrow.” * Publishers Weekly *
“I relished Joseph’s vivid accounts of New Yorkers’ communal campaigns against the wanton destruction of urban green spaces that had been a source of pleasure, solace and inspiration to citizens for many decades. She demonstrates that environmental challenges bring people together, no matter how disparate and apparently divided the population of a large city may seem to be. . . . [I]t speaks powerfully to a critical moment in urban ecology." -- Laurence Coupe * Times Higher Education *
“A tour-de-force, Fluid New York should be read and absorbed by anyone interested in how urbanism has recently developed along with ecology and how it continues to evolve within an ecological context.” -- Jim Elledge * Mom Egg Review *
“Joseph’s work is highly creative and beautifully written. The book will be welcomed by scholars of urban studies especially those interested in cultural studies, citizenship studies and urban environmental history.” -- Anthony Levenda * Urban Studies *
Fluid New York would be useful in any course about the history of New York City. For scholars interested in how the environment shapes and is shaped by urban life and culture, Joseph’s book deepens our understanding.” -- Sean Singer * American Studies *
Fluid New York is an admirable study and I recommend it to readers who are interested in the green future of coastal cities.” -- William Kornblum * Contemporary Sociology *

Table of Contents
Illustrations vii
Acknowledgments ix
Preface xi
Prologue 1
Introduction 7
Part I. Fluid Urbanism 19
1. Water Ecology, Island City 23
2. Transoceanic New York, City of Rivers 35
3. The Maritime Sky of Manhattan 55
4. Thinking Metropolitanism 70
Part II. Cosmopolitan Frugality 93
5. Nomadic Urbanism and Frugality 95
6. Nyerere, the Dalai Lama, Gandhi: Cultures of Frugality 110
Part III. Ecological Expressivity 131
7. Greening Hardscape 133
8. Marathon City, Biking Boroughs 151
Part IV. Maritime Mentalities 167
9. Brooklyn Carnival and the Sale of Dreamland 169
10. Spirits of Necropolis, Planes on the Hudson 179
11. Governors Island: Maritime Pasts, Ecological Futures 189
12. After Hurricane Sandy 204
Conclusion: Toward a Praxis of Cosmopolitan Citizenship 211
Notes 213
Bibliography 231
Index 239

Fluid New York

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    A Hardback by May Joseph

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      Publisher: MD - Duke University Press
      Publication Date: 7/2/2013 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780822354604, 978-0822354604
      ISBN10: 0822354608

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Fluid New York offers reflections on how New York began to incorporate the city's archipelago ecology into plans for a livable and sustainable future in the decade between September 11 and Hurricane Sandy.

      Trade Review
      “Joseph addresses vital topics like city planning for ecological sustainability and how the city must meet the needs of a heterogeneous population. . . . Joseph expresses both affection and concern for her city, highlighting both its creative potential and provincial hubris it must outgrow.” - Publishers Weekly
      “I relished Joseph’s vivid accounts of New Yorkers’ communal campaigns against the wanton destruction of urban green spaces that had been a source of pleasure, solace and inspiration to citizens for many decades. She demonstrates that environmental challenges bring people together, no matter how disparate and apparently divided the population of a large city may seem to be. . . . [I]t speaks powerfully to a critical moment in urban ecology.” - Laurence Coupe, Times Higher
      “A tour-de-force, Fluid New York should be read and absorbed by anyone interested in how urbanism has recently developed along with ecology and how it continues to evolve within an ecological context.” - Jim Elledge, The Mom Egg
      "Fluid New York is a beautifully written and conceived book. Based on rich ethnographic material, May Joseph develops a persuasive vision of New York as a city with an emerging culture of 'fluid urbanism.' Her compelling arguments offer a way to rethink space and performative cultures in cities such as Bangalore, Beijing, and Dar es Salaam, and to put New York in dialogue with those cities and their urbanisms. This is wonderful, vivid, and insightful work."—Smriti Srinivas, author of Landscapes of Urban Memory and In the Presence of Sai Baba
      "This important book illuminates new ideas that took hold of the bodies and minds of New Yorkers in the decade after September 11. May Joseph's New York is characterized by the radical implosion and intensification of global difference. Her narrative consistently gives voice to people who have always been present in New York but not often heard from."—Brian McGrath, Research Chair in Urban Design, Parsons The New School for Design
      "Gorgeously written and keenly observed, Joseph’s book evokes both the global and the local in her consideration of New York City’s evolving relationship to its waterfront. . . . This vast book and its singular story reveal the pleasures of cosmopolitan belonging, as well as the difficult measures that must be taken to preserve urban settings and citizens on a warming planet." -- Jennie Lightweis-Goff * Journal of American Culture *
      “Joseph addresses vital topics like city planning for ecological sustainability and how the city must meet the needs of a heterogeneous population. . . . Joseph expresses both affection and concern for her city, highlighting both its creative potential and provincial hubris it must outgrow.” * Publishers Weekly *
      “I relished Joseph’s vivid accounts of New Yorkers’ communal campaigns against the wanton destruction of urban green spaces that had been a source of pleasure, solace and inspiration to citizens for many decades. She demonstrates that environmental challenges bring people together, no matter how disparate and apparently divided the population of a large city may seem to be. . . . [I]t speaks powerfully to a critical moment in urban ecology." -- Laurence Coupe * Times Higher Education *
      “A tour-de-force, Fluid New York should be read and absorbed by anyone interested in how urbanism has recently developed along with ecology and how it continues to evolve within an ecological context.” -- Jim Elledge * Mom Egg Review *
      “Joseph’s work is highly creative and beautifully written. The book will be welcomed by scholars of urban studies especially those interested in cultural studies, citizenship studies and urban environmental history.” -- Anthony Levenda * Urban Studies *
      Fluid New York would be useful in any course about the history of New York City. For scholars interested in how the environment shapes and is shaped by urban life and culture, Joseph’s book deepens our understanding.” -- Sean Singer * American Studies *
      Fluid New York is an admirable study and I recommend it to readers who are interested in the green future of coastal cities.” -- William Kornblum * Contemporary Sociology *

      Table of Contents
      Illustrations vii
      Acknowledgments ix
      Preface xi
      Prologue 1
      Introduction 7
      Part I. Fluid Urbanism 19
      1. Water Ecology, Island City 23
      2. Transoceanic New York, City of Rivers 35
      3. The Maritime Sky of Manhattan 55
      4. Thinking Metropolitanism 70
      Part II. Cosmopolitan Frugality 93
      5. Nomadic Urbanism and Frugality 95
      6. Nyerere, the Dalai Lama, Gandhi: Cultures of Frugality 110
      Part III. Ecological Expressivity 131
      7. Greening Hardscape 133
      8. Marathon City, Biking Boroughs 151
      Part IV. Maritime Mentalities 167
      9. Brooklyn Carnival and the Sale of Dreamland 169
      10. Spirits of Necropolis, Planes on the Hudson 179
      11. Governors Island: Maritime Pasts, Ecological Futures 189
      12. After Hurricane Sandy 204
      Conclusion: Toward a Praxis of Cosmopolitan Citizenship 211
      Notes 213
      Bibliography 231
      Index 239

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