It happened on Washington Square
著者
書誌事項
It happened on Washington Square
(Center books on space, place, and time)
Johns Hopkins University Press, c2002
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注記
Includes bibliographical references (p. [331]-343) and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
The heart of New York City's Greenwich Village, Washington Square Park, has been a vital public space for nearly two centuries. Lined by elegant townhouses, anchored by Stanford White's iconic Washington Arch, and used by students and professionals, dog walkers and musicians, chess players and toddlers, the park is both an oasis from and an ideal of urban life. Synonymous with the city's artistic identity, the park has also witnessed waves of political and social unrest, and served as a focal point for contentious debates about the future of urban development. In this volume, Emily Kies Folpe tells of Washington Square's rich and colourful history. Farmed by New Amsterdam's freed African slaves in the 17th century, the park was used as a potter's field and duelling ground in the aftermath of the Revolutionary War and then converted into a parade ground for the city's volunteer militia in 1826. Since the 1830s, when it formed the nucleus of an upscale community, Washington Square has been an incubator for American art and a haven for writers, painters, sculptors and architects.
At the beginning of the 20th century, the area began to attract the artists and political radicals - from John Reed to the Beats - who gave the Square a counter-cultural aura it still possesses. In recent decades, the Square's residents have united against such threats to their neighbourhood as the urban redevelopment proposed by Robert Moses and the expansion of New York University. Illustrated with a selection of historic images, the volume explains why the survival of this unique public space is so important.
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