The Making of Our Urban Landscape
Autor Geoffrey Tyacken Limba Engleză Hardback – 30 mar 2022
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780198792635
ISBN-10: 0198792638
Pagini: 384
Ilustrații: 160 illustrations
Dimensiuni: 162 x 241 x 32 mm
Greutate: 0.6 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0198792638
Pagini: 384
Ilustrații: 160 illustrations
Dimensiuni: 162 x 241 x 32 mm
Greutate: 0.6 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Recenzii
Geoffrey Tyack has produced a rich and exhaustive almanac that shows just how - and often why - our urban landscape has evolved over time... The Making of Our Urban Landscape is a triumph. In its lavish detail and encyclopedic scholarship, it is a modern Baedeker for the whole of urban Britain, drawing us to explore this rich urban heritage for ourselves.
What a book this is: a survey of the evolution of Britains towns and cities by the great architectural historian, Geoffrey Tyack. It embraces geography, industry, religion, natural resources, royal patron-age, water supply, politics... Everything is here...
A brave attempt to encapsulate the idea of Britain's urban history within one modestly sized volume.
fascinating... packed with information
With such a huge sweep its a god-send that the author shares William Blakes view that art and science cannot exist but in minutely organised particulars. Hes big on details but doesnt lose sight of the generals; and in this volume there are copious photographs to bring prose to life.
Tyacks book...tells a story at once sweeping in scope and nuanced in texture...Building upon a lifetimes study, Professor Tyack has done an invaluable service. He has winnowed from adjacent historical disciplines (demographic, architectural, economic and local) and gathered them into one narrative... If you want to hear the ghosts whispers as you walk round Britains streets and squares, this excellent book is a good place to start.
A remarkable new book...Geoffrey Tyack deftly moves through two millennia of Great Britains towns and cities with an impeccable depth and breadth of knowledge... The book does admirably in examining the exigencies and contingencies that have determined the contours of our urbanismThe greatest strength of Tyacks book is that he understands the vital role played by architecture in shaping and reflecting our society and uses his considerable powers to ponder on the deep history of both.
...a valuable contribution in the field of urban history
The fruit of a lifetime's study, Geoffrey Tyack's new book offers an expert survey of Britain's urban history from the Romans to the present day. A brilliant example of learning worn lightly, it takes the reader on a fascinating tour of towns across the country. The Making of Our Urban Landscape is entertaining and enlightening in equal measure. It's important, too, as we confront difficult decisions about our urban future.
this will appeal to the general reader whose interest in local history will be greatly enriched... admirable and makes urban and landscape history joyously accessible.
a valuable contribution in the field of urban history, not least because of its broad geographical and temporal coverage.
What a book this is: a survey of the evolution of Britains towns and cities by the great architectural historian, Geoffrey Tyack. It embraces geography, industry, religion, natural resources, royal patron-age, water supply, politics... Everything is here...
A brave attempt to encapsulate the idea of Britain's urban history within one modestly sized volume.
fascinating... packed with information
With such a huge sweep its a god-send that the author shares William Blakes view that art and science cannot exist but in minutely organised particulars. Hes big on details but doesnt lose sight of the generals; and in this volume there are copious photographs to bring prose to life.
Tyacks book...tells a story at once sweeping in scope and nuanced in texture...Building upon a lifetimes study, Professor Tyack has done an invaluable service. He has winnowed from adjacent historical disciplines (demographic, architectural, economic and local) and gathered them into one narrative... If you want to hear the ghosts whispers as you walk round Britains streets and squares, this excellent book is a good place to start.
A remarkable new book...Geoffrey Tyack deftly moves through two millennia of Great Britains towns and cities with an impeccable depth and breadth of knowledge... The book does admirably in examining the exigencies and contingencies that have determined the contours of our urbanismThe greatest strength of Tyacks book is that he understands the vital role played by architecture in shaping and reflecting our society and uses his considerable powers to ponder on the deep history of both.
...a valuable contribution in the field of urban history
The fruit of a lifetime's study, Geoffrey Tyack's new book offers an expert survey of Britain's urban history from the Romans to the present day. A brilliant example of learning worn lightly, it takes the reader on a fascinating tour of towns across the country. The Making of Our Urban Landscape is entertaining and enlightening in equal measure. It's important, too, as we confront difficult decisions about our urban future.
this will appeal to the general reader whose interest in local history will be greatly enriched... admirable and makes urban and landscape history joyously accessible.
a valuable contribution in the field of urban history, not least because of its broad geographical and temporal coverage.
Notă biografică
Geoffrey Tyack is the former Director of the Stanford University Programme in Oxford and a Fellow of Kellogg College. He is President of the Oxfordshire Architectural and Historical Society and a Trustee of the Oxford Preservation Trust, a council member of the London Topographical Society, and Editor of the Georgian Group Journal. He is the author of numerous articles and books on architectural history, including Oxford: An Architectural Guide (OUP, 1998), and is co-editor of the revised volume on Berkshire in the Pevsner Buildings of England series (Yale, 2010).