The Limits of the CityHarper & Row, 1974 - 147 pages |
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Page 6
... agricultural society based on an independent peasantry . The problems of this long period were primarily agrarian problems and the greatest economic weight lay not in cities but in the countryside , or at least among social classes ...
... agricultural society based on an independent peasantry . The problems of this long period were primarily agrarian problems and the greatest economic weight lay not in cities but in the countryside , or at least among social classes ...
Page 16
... agricultural surpluses by a privileged stratum . Within these archaic parameters , ex- ploitation of human by human emerges even before pri- vate property in land and resources has been firmly estab- lished . With the Asian land system ...
... agricultural surpluses by a privileged stratum . Within these archaic parameters , ex- ploitation of human by human emerges even before pri- vate property in land and resources has been firmly estab- lished . With the Asian land system ...
Page 33
... agricultural ways . The " Fall of Rome " can be explained by the rise of Rome . The Latin city was carried to imperial heights not by the resources of its rural environs , but by spoils acquired from the systematic looting of the Near ...
... agricultural ways . The " Fall of Rome " can be explained by the rise of Rome . The Latin city was carried to imperial heights not by the resources of its rural environs , but by spoils acquired from the systematic looting of the Near ...
Table des matières
Introduction | 1 |
The Rise of the Bourgeois City | 36 |
The Limits of the Bourgeois City | 57 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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Expressions et termes fréquents
abstract administrative agrarian society agricultural ancient archaic architecture areas arena Asian land system Athenian Athens authentic Aztec become began Berkeley bourgeois city bureaucratic CALIFORNIA LIBRARY capital capital accumulation capitalist century city planning city's civic clan Cleisthenes commodity contrast corporatism counterculture countryside cultural division of labor domination ecocommunity economic emerged environment esthetic Europe European fact factory feudal food cultivation functions garden city goals Greek guild Hellenic historical Howard human increasingly independent individual industrial interests labor power Latium limits marketplace material Max Horkheimer medieval commune megalopolis ment merely Mesoamerica Mesopotamia metropolis mode modern city monads Mumford Murray Bookchin nature neighborhood organic Pisistratus planners pochteca polis political population precapitalist problems production rational rela relationship Rome rural sense social relations space square miles structure Tenochtitlan tion town and country trade traditional transformation tribal ture unity UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA urban dweller urban entity York