Description
Book SynopsisOver the last twenty years there has been a growing international interest in the city of Barcelona. This has been reflected in the academic world through a series of studies, courses, seminars, and publications. The Barcelona Reader hinges together a selection of the best academic articles, written in English, about the city, and its main elements of identity and interest: art, urban planning, history and social movements. The book includes scholarly essays about Barcelona that can be of interest to the student and the general public alike. It focuses on cultural representations of the city: the arts (including literature) provide a complex yet discontinuous portrait of the city, similar to a patchwork. The authors selected create a kaleidoscope of views and voices thus presenting a diverse yet inclusive Barcelona portrait. The Barcelona Reader offers a multifaceted assessment that will be essential reading for anyone interested in this iconic city.
Trade ReviewReviews 'Bou and Subirana offer us a great collection of articles on the city of Barcelona written in English (...) in a book with a wide approach to the subject. The city is, by definition, a complex creation and its interpretation therefore demands a plurality of views ("ways of seeing" according to John Berger).
Barcelones, in the words of Manuel Vázquez Montalbán, expresses this multifocal attitude to observe reality and face the object of study. (...) With the help of twenty-one top-level essayists, they have turned Barcelona into a field of study of increasing interest. The complexity of the city demanded, as we say, multiple knowledge. The look that the texts present to us is the result of an interpretative framework that the authors define in so far as they practice it.'
Toni Mollà,
L'Espill'A cultural feast for both visitors and residents, the city is captured with depth and precision in
The Barcelona Reader [...] Overall, the reader provides an in-depth study of Barcelona, from its crimes and graveyards, to its grand streets, to the questions of authenticity and tourism, to the showcase of the 1992 Olympic games. This is a reader that achieves its raison d’être, covering a broad range of specialities and topics for just about everyone. Ultimately,
The Barcelona Reader succeeds in capturing the true essence of the city.'
Pádraig Collins,
AIGNETable of ContentsList of illustrations
Notes on contributors
Introduction: Barcelona: Cultural readings of a city — Enric Bou and Jaume Subirana
I City, history, and territory1. Barcelona: The siege city — Robert Davidson
2. Barcelona as an adaptive ecology — Ferran Sagarra
3. A present past, Barcelona street names, from Víctor Balaguer to Pasqual Maragall — Jaume Subirana
4. ‘The asylum of modern times’: Barcelona and Europe — Felipe Fernández-Armesto
5. A fragile country — Colm Tóibín
II City and society6. Barcelona and modernity — Brad Epps
7. Football and identities in Catalonia — Alejandro Quiroga
8. The family and the city: Power and the creation of cultural imagery — Gary Wray McDonogh
9. Memory and the city in Barcelona’s cemeteries — Elisa Martí-López
III Art, architecture, and the city10. Picasso among his fellows at 4 Gats: Beyond
Modernisme? — Jordi Falgàs
11. Gaudí: Poet of stone, artistic hedgehog — Marià Marín i Torné
12. El Poble Espanyol / El Pueblo Español (1929) — Jordana Mendelson
IV The Olympics and the city13. Barcelona: Urban identity 1992–2002 — Donald McNeill
14. From the Olympic torch to the Universal Forum of Cultures: The after-image of Barcelona’s modernity — Joan Ramon Resina
V Literature, cinema, and the city15.
La Gran Encisera: Three odes to Barcelona, and a film — Josep Miquel Sobrer
16. The deceptive dame: Criminal revelations of the Catalan capital — Stewart King
17. A
Biutiful city: Alejandro González Iñárritu’s filmic critique of the ‘Barcelona Model’ — Benjamin Fraser