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Books in the Lateral Exchanges: Architecture, Urban Development, and Transnational Practices series

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  • - Transatlantic Architecture and the Crafting of Modernity
    by Fabiola Lopez-Duran
    £64.49

  • - Planning Cultures, the Academy, and the Making of the Modern Middle East
    by Burak Erdim
    £34.99

    Landed Internationals explores how postwar encounters in housing and planning helped transform the dynamics of international development and challenged American modernity.

  • - Antonio Bonet's Dreams for Buenos Aires
    by Ana Maria Leon
    £34.99

    A provocative examination of how the discourse and practice of modern architecture was transformed by its encounter with large populations and the volatile politics of twentieth-century Argentina.

  • by Mary P. Ryan
    £25.49 - 28.99

    This historical study shows how San Francisco and Baltimore were central to American expansion through the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. The history of the United States is often told as a movement westward, beginning at the Atlantic coast and following farmers across the continent. But early settlements and towns sprung up along the Pacific as well as the Atlantic, as Spaniards and Englishmen took Indian land and converted it into private property. In this ambitious study of historical geography and urban development, Mary P. Ryan reframes the story of American expansion. Baltimore and San Francisco share common roots as early coastal trading centers immersed in the international circulation of goods and ideas. Ryan traces their beginnings back to the first human habitation of each area, showing how the juggernaut toward capitalism and nation-building could not commence until Europeans had taken the land for city building. She then recounts how Mexican ayuntamientos and Anglo-American city councils pioneered a prescient form of municipal sovereignty that served as both a crucible for democracy and a handmaid of capitalism. Moving into the nineteenth century, Ryan shows how the citizens of Baltimore and San Francisco molded the shape of the modern city: the gridded downtown, rudimentary streetcar suburbs, and outlying great parks. This history culminates in the era of the Civil War when the economic engines of cities helped forge the East and the West into one nation.

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