The rise of suburbs and disinvestment from cities have been defining features of life in many countries over the course of the twentieth century. In Victorian Visions of Suburban Utopia, Nathaniel Walker asks: why did we abandon our dense, complex urban places and seek to find the best of the city and the country in the flowery suburbs? While looking back at the architecture and urban design of the 1800s offers some answers, Walker argues that a great missing piece of the story can be found in Victorian utopian literature. The replacement of cities with high-tech suburbs was repeatedly imagined and breathlessly described in the socialist dreams and science-fiction fantasies of dozens of British and American authors. Some of these visionaries such as Robert Owen, Edward Bulwer-Lytton, Edward Bellamy, William Morris, Ebenezer Howard, and H. G. Wells are enduringly famous, while others were street vendors or amateur chemists who have been all but forgotten. Together, they fashioned strange and beautiful imaginary worlds built of synthetic gemstones, lacy metal colonnades, and unbreakable glass, staffed by robotic servants and teeming with flying carriages. As varied as their futuristic visions could be, Walker reveals how most of them were unified by a single, desperate plea: for humanity to have a future worth living, we must abandon our smoky, poor, chaotic Babylonian cities for a life in shimmering gardens.
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Product Details
Weight: 1g
Dimensions: 166 x 36mm
Publication Date: 26 Nov 2020
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9780198861447
About Nathaniel Robert Walker
Nathaniel Robert Walker is Associate Professor of Architectural History at The Catholic University of America. He earned his PhD at Brown University and studies the relationships between architecture aesthetics public space urban design political power and dreams of the future both utopian and apocalyptic. He has published essays in ARRIS Buildings and Landscapes the Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians Traditional Dwellings and Settlements Review Utopian Studies and a number of edited volumes including Suffragette City: Women Politics and the Built Environment which he co-edited with E. Darling. He has curated two exhibitions dealing with the connections between architecture urbanism and human dreams: Building Expectations: Past and Present Visions of the Architectural Future (Bell Gallery Providence) and The City Luminous: Architectures of Hope in an Age of Fear (City Gallery Charleston co-curated with J. Streit).