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Loading... Picture Windows: How the Suburbs Happenedby Rosalyn Baxandall (otherwise under Rosalyn Fraad Baxandall)
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. The subject matter (the evolution of suburbia, from architecture to economics to neighborhood/community culture, on Long Island NY) is interesting, and the authors' writing style is refreshingly readable, especially for an academic work. But somebody did a positively *horrible* job proofreading and cleaning this up for publication. The sheer number of typos and even improperly formated bits (such as the second and third block quotes and footnoted items in the first chapter) honestly shocked me. I actually flipped back to the publication page, about 20 pages in, to doublecheck whether my copy might be an uncorrected ARC. The sloppiness really undercut my enjoyment of the reading and even my trust of the work, which was a shame. ( )I think there are better books about the history of suburbia, but the second half of Picture Windows was a great study of the original Levittown on Long Island. I especially appreciated the discussion of recent changes in the racial and ethnic demographics of Long Island, as well as the economic difficulties resulting from de-industrialization and illegal work practices. The authors present a more positive, though still critical, view of suburbia that is missing in most scholarship. no reviews | add a review
Amazon.com (ISBN 0465070132, Paperback)This fascinating study of the suburbs of Long Island, New York (and by analogy, those across America) arose from the authors' daily commute from Manhattan to SUNY Old Westbury, which is near Levittown, one of the earliest and perhaps the most famous of American suburbs. Initially they had imagined suburbia "as an anaesthetized state of mind, a no place dominated by a culture of conformity and consumption." Their research quickly taught them otherwise. While Picture Windows does document a growing obsession with middle-class consumer goods, like the televisions that came with 1950 houses at Levittown, it disrupts the myth of suburban serenity to reveal "a rich and stormy history" of political and social conflict. The planners and visionaries of suburbia, as the authors attest, tried to create a place "where ordinary people, not just the elite, would have access to affordable, attractive modern housing in communities with parks, gardens, recreation, stores, and cooperative town meeting places." Shunning the "snobbery" of cultural critics who deplored the "neat little toy houses on their neat little patches of lawn," Baxandall and Ewen find much to celebrate in the burgeoning suburbs. Most of those who flocked to the new towns had been crowded into city slums during the depression and war; they never questioned the architectural conformity of the suburbs, but only rejoiced in the chance of owning their own brand-new homes, places empty of anyone else's memories and rich with potential. Picture Windows is a quintessentially American story, told with skill and conviction. --Regina Marler(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:18 -0400) The first test round has been closed. Visit the Open Shelves Classification group for details. |
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