A History of Future Cities – Old Shanghai as an “instant city”
Posted: August 16th, 2013 | No Comments »I haven’t had a chance to read this book yet so can’t actually vouch the author has anything new to say on Shanghai or knows the city particularly well but this looks a potentially interesting new book by Daniel Brook, A History of Future Cities. The book is a collection of concise portraits of St. Petersburg, Russia; Bombay, India; Shanghai, China; and Dubai – Brook argues that these are all “instant cities” of the past in the way that Shenzhen and the like are today. Indeed, Brook argues, these cities were “dress rehearsals for the twenty-first century.â€Brook argues that, “Shanghai became the fastest-growing city on earth as it mushroomed into an English-speaking, Western-looking metropolis that just happened to be in the Far East” Of course there are longer and more detailed studies of Shanghai history and rise (recommended especially is Building Shanghai by Edward Denison and Guang Yu Ren) but this book may add some perspective….
A pioneering exploration of four cities where East meets West and past becomes future: St. Petersburg, Shanghai, Mumbai, and Dubai.
Every month, five million people move from the past to the future. Pouring into developing-world “instant cities†like Dubai and Shenzhen, these urban newcomers confront a modern world cobbled together from fragments of a West they have never seen. Do these fantastical boomtowns, where blueprints spring to life overnight on virgin land, represent the dawning of a brave new world? Or is their vaunted newness a mirage?
In a captivating blend of history and reportage, Daniel Brook travels to a series of major metropolitan hubs that were once themselves instant cities— St. Petersburg, Shanghai, and Mumbai—to watch their “dress rehearsals for the twenty-first century.†Understanding today’s emerging global order, he argues, requires comprehending the West’s profound and conflicted influence on developing-world cities over the centuries.
In 1703, Tsar Peter the Great personally oversaw the construction of a new Russian capital, a “window on the West†carefully modeled on Amsterdam, that he believed would wrench Russia into the modern world. In the nineteenth century, Shanghai became the fastest-growing city on earth as it mushroomed into an English-speaking, Western-looking metropolis that just happened to be in the Far East. Meanwhile, Bombay, the cosmopolitan hub of the British Raj, morphed into a tropical London at the hands of its pith-helmeted imperialists.
Juxtaposing the stories of the architects and authoritarians, the artists and revolutionaries who seized the reins to transform each of these precociously modern places into avatars of the global future, Brook demonstrates that the drive for modernization was initially conflated with wholesale Westernization. He shows, too, the ambiguous legacy of that emulation—the birth (and rebirth) of Chinese capitalism in Shanghai, the origins of Bollywood in Bombay’s American-style movie palaces, the combustible mix of revolutionary culture and politics that rocked the Russian capital—and how it may be transcended today.
A fascinating, vivid look from the past out toward the horizon, A History of Future Cities is both a crucial reminder of globalization’s long march and an inspiring look into the possibilities of our Asian Century.
Daniel Brook is the author of The Trap and a journalist whose work has appeared in publications including Harper’s, The Nation and Slate.
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