How do cities use culture today? Building on the
experience of New York as a 'culture capital', Sharon
Zukin shows how three notions of culture - as ethnicity,
aesthetic, and marketing tool - are reshaping urban
places and conflicts over revitalization. She rejects
the idea that cities have either a singular urban
culture or many different subcultures to argue that
cultures are constantly negotiated in the city's central
spaces - the streets, parks, shops, museums, and
restaurants - which are the great public spaces of
modernity. While cultural gentrification may contribute
to making our cities both safer and more civilised
places to live, it has its darker side. Beneath the
perceptions of 'civility' and 'security' nurtured by
cultural strategies, Zukin shows an aggressive
private-sector bid for control of public space, a
relentless drive for expansion by art museums and other
non-profit cultural institutions, and an increasing
redesign of the built environment for the purposes of
social control.Tying these developments to a new
'symbolic economy' based on tourism, media and
entertainment, Zukin traces the connections between real
estate development and popular expression, and between
elite visions of the arts and more democratic
representations. Going beyond the immigrants, artists,
street peddlers, and security guards who are the key
figures in the symbolic economy, Zukin asks: Who really
occupies the central spaces of cities? And whose culture
is imposed as public culture? Combining cultural
critique, interviews, autobiography and ethnography,
''The Culture of Cities'' is a compelling account of the
public spaces of modernity as they are transformed into
new, more troubling landscapes. |
|