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Timing the Future Metropolis: Foresight, Knowledge, and Doubt in America's Postwar Urbanism

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Peter Ekman
2024
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Timing the Future Metropolis—an intellectual history of planning, urbanism, design, and social science—explores the network of postwar institutions, formed amid specters of urban "crisis" and "renewal," that set out to envision the future of the American city. Peter Ekman focuses on one decisive node in the network: the Joint Center for Urban Studies, founded in 1959 by scholars at Harvard and MIT.

Through its sprawling programs of "organized research," its manifold connections to universities, foundations, publishers, and policymakers, and its years of consultation on the planning of a new city in Venezuela—Ciudad Guayana—the Joint Center became preoccupied with the question of how to conceptualize the urban future as an object of knowledge. Timing the Future Metropolis ultimately compels a broader reflection on temporality in urban planning, rethinking how we might imagine cities yet to come—and the consequences of deciding not to.

Table of Contents

Cover

Half Title Page, Title Page, Copyright

pp. i-iv

Contents

pp. v-viii

Introduction: Urban Times

pp. 1-16

1. Centers and Their Edges: Formations of Urban Knowledge in Postwar America

pp. 17-53

2. The Atmosphere and the Network: Organizing Expertise at the Joint Center for Urban Studies

pp. 54-86

3. "Our Retrospection Will All Be to the Future": History, Inference, and the Temporalities of Planning

pp. 87-129

4. "A Documented Experience": Cambridge on the Caroní

pp. 130-175

5. Reoriented: The Conservative Center and the New Politics of Expectation

pp. 176-208

6. The Belated City: Forgetting the Future Metropolis

pp. 209-245

Coda: A Forward Signal

pp. 246-256

Acknowledgments

pp. 257-262

Notes

pp. 263-364

Index

pp. 365-373
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