Invention of the Park

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A01=John Wills
A01=Karen R. Jones
adventures
Author_John Wills
Author_Karen R. Jones
beach
blackpool
broadranging
bucolic
Category=RG
childhood
country estates
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
explores
fascination
frolics
ideas
images
invention
kaleidoscope
park
parks
playgrounds
pleasure
rides
serengeti
thrill
urban
whiteknuckle

Product details

  • ISBN 9780745631387
  • Weight: 454g
  • Dimensions: 158 x 231mm
  • Publication Date: 18 May 2005
  • Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The word 'park' conjures a kaleidoscope of bucolic images. Childhood frolics in urban playgrounds. Strolls through the country estates of Stourhead and Versailles. Wilderness adventures in the Serengeti. White-knuckle thrill rides at Blackpool Pleasure Beach and Coney Island. The Invention of the Park explores our fascination with making parks. In a broad-ranging environmental and social history, authors Karen Jones and John Wills search for a common set of ideas that inform park design. From Greek philosophers wandering sacred groves in the ancient world to today's kids watching Mickey Mouse in Disney's Magic Kingdom, the park has inspired and thrilled in equal measure. In a work spanning all five continents and several thousand years, Jones and Wills chart the evolution of the park idea. They ponder the intersection of the green pleasure ground with notions of democracy and freedom, welfare and consumption, conservation and nature. They forward the principle of a universal park idea malleable enough to survive war and revolution.

Contributing to a growing literature on global environmental history, the Invention of the Park explores how the park idea has come to transcend national boundaries and found appeal among a worldwide audience. Jones and Wills situate the park as a complex product of natural and cultural forces. Their work is of interest not just to students and scholars of environmental philosophy, history, and landscape design, but to amateur gardeners, rollercoaster 'adrenalin junkies' and all those who like to take a 'walk in the park.'

Karen Jones, Lecturer in American Historyat the School of History, University of Kent

John Wills, Teacher in American Studies, Sociology and History, University of Essex

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