City of Broken Dreams: Myth-making, Nationalism and the University in an African Motor City
Paperback | English
By (author): Leslie J. Bank
The cultural power of the car and its associations with the endless possibilities of modernity lie at the heart of the refusal of many rust-belt motor cities to seek alternative development paths that could move them away from racially inscribed, automotive capitalism and cultures. This is no less true in East London than it is in the motor cities of Flint and Detroit in the US.
Since the end of the Second World War, universities have become increasingly urbanised, resulting in widespread concerns about the autonomy of universities as places of critical thinking and learning. Simultaneously, there is increased debate about the role universities can play in building urban economies, creating jobs and reshaping the politics and identities of cities.
In City of Broken Dreams, author Leslie Bank embeds the reader''s understanding of the university within a history of industrialisation, placing-making and city building. See more
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