Mao once called the Chinese "a blank sheet of paper", and the modernising that came with the Cultural Revolution treated cities much the same. But Mao's destructive impulses were as nothing compared to the liberalised policies of his recent successors. China has undergone urbanisation on a scale never seen before - much of it speculative, some of it a brazen display of power. In this incisive analysis by the acclaimed Sinologist Julia Lovell, we get inside the politics of architecture and city-making in China. There is a colourful cast, from the Western starchitects rushing into the land of opportunity, to political dissidents such as Ai Weiwei, to rebellious residents singing defiantly as the bulldozers advance. In this trenchant critique of urban policy, Lovell wonders what good all this thrusting ambition will have been if the property bubble bursts.
The Emergency State
David C. Unger
audiobookThe Fight for Beauty : Our Path to a Better Future
Fiona Reynolds
bookAmericans in a World at War : Intimate Histories from the Crash of Pan Am's Yankee Clipper
Brooke L. Blower
audiobookHead in the Cloud : Dispatches from a Post-Fact World
William Poundstone
bookOutlines of Zuñi Creation Myths
Frank Hamilton Cushing
bookTilværelsen
Flemming Madsen
bookArtificial Gravity
Fouad Sabry
bookA Year of Glory and Gold : 1932 - Ireland's Jazz Age
Kevin C. Kearns
bookFree Agents : How Evolution Gave Us Free Will
Kevin J. Mitchell
audiobookLand of Desire
William R. Leach
audiobookThe Hawk's Way : Encounters with Fierce Beauty
Sy Montgomery
bookSmooth Path or Long and Winding Road? : How Institutions Shape the Transition from Higher Education to Work
Kathrin Leuze
book