Fleeting Cities

About this book
Imperial expositions held in fin-de-siècle London, Paris and Berlin were knots in a world-wide web. Conceptualizing exhibitions as meta-media, Fleeting Cities undertakes a transdisciplinary investigation into how modernity was created and displayed, consumed and disputed within the European metropolis. Focusing on five such expositions – the Berliner Gewerbeausstellung (1896), the fifth Parisian Exposition Universelle (1900), the Franco-British Exhibition in London (1908), the British Empire Exhibition at Wembley (1924/25), and the Exposition Coloniale Internationale in Paris (1931) – this award-winning book examines their specific aims and aspirations, evolving forms and execution, and the public debates they engendered. Who shaped these mega-events, how were exposition venues inscribed into the urban fabric, what legacies did they bequeath? Taken as dense textures stretched over time, these expositions undergo both a close hermeneutic reading and broad spatial analysis. Fleeting Cities weaves extensive empirical research with underlying theoretical concerns, investigating their individual meanings in a new form of transnational network analysis.
Details
- OL Work ID
- OL15632417W
Subjects
Franco-British Exhibition (1908 : London, England)ExhibitionsBerliner Gewerbe-Ausstellung (1896)Cities and townsModern CivilizationExposition universelle internationale de 1900 (Paris, France)British Empire Exhibition (1924 : Wembley, England)CivilizationExposition coloniale internationale de Paris (1931)HistoryBritish Empire Exhibition (1924-1925 : Wembley, London, England)Europe, civilizationExposition universelle (1900 : Paris, France)