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Urban Societies in Europe since 1945: Toward a Historical Interpretation
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 October 2015
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How can we write the history of urban societies in Europe after 1945? This article offers an interpretative overview of key developments in both Eastern and Western Europe, while also discussing some key conceptual issues. Along the way, it takes stock of the relevant historiography (much of which is very recent) and introduces a selection of papers from a cycle of three international workshops held between 2011 and 2013. The papers range geographically from Britain to the Soviet Union and cover topics as diverse as post-war reconstruction and alternative communities in the 1970s. Their respective approaches are informed by an interest in the way societies have been imagined in discourses and reshaped in spatial settings. Moreover, the papers move beyond case studies, urban history's classic genre, and can therefore facilitate synthetic reflection. It is our hope that, in so doing, we can make urban history more relevant to contemporary European historians in general.
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- Contemporary European History , Volume 24 , Special Issue 4: Urban Societies in Europe , November 2015 , pp. 475 - 491
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- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2015
References
1 When used as purely geographic descriptors these terms are not capitalised. However, in the context of this special issue, ‘Western’ and ‘Eastern’ tend to refer to political and ideological distinctions (implicit or explicit) as well as to geographic ones, and will thus be capitalised.
2 We should like to thank our former academic home, the School of History at the University of Leeds, for hosting and funding the workshops, especially its chair at the time, Richard Whiting.
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27 Donald Filtzer, The Hazards of Urban Life in Late Stalinist Russia (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010).
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41 Lebow, Katherine, Unfinished Utopia: Nowa Huta, Stalinism, and Polish Society, 1949–1956 (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2013)CrossRefGoogle Scholar. The writings of Lebow and others show that the reality of ‘totalitarian’ and would-be utopian urban societies, even in entirely new and purpose-built cities, was far more varied and multi-grained than is allowed in the very influential work of Scott, James C., Seeing Like a State: How Certain Schemes to Improve the Human Condition Have Failed (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1998)Google Scholar.
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