Another tip off via Twitter...
The INFINITE CITY is an article about a new book by Rebecca Solnit, who we like a lot at the Geography Collective.
It's an 'atlas of San Francisco', but not the usual type...
They are designed to make the reader think anew about the city of San Francisco—its history, natural habitat, economic function, political values—and, by extension, about the way we all imagine the places we live in. "A city," Solnit writes in her introduction, "is a particular kind of place, perhaps best described as many worlds in one place; it compounds many versions without reconciling them."
Ordinary maps show only the physical infrastructure that these "many worlds" share—streets, rivers, monuments.
The maps in Infinite City, on the other hand, treat the physical city as a blank slate, on which many different experiences can be overwritten, like texts on a palimpsest.
Exciting urban geography...
Sounds like a fascinating book !!
The INFINITE CITY is an article about a new book by Rebecca Solnit, who we like a lot at the Geography Collective.
It's an 'atlas of San Francisco', but not the usual type...
They are designed to make the reader think anew about the city of San Francisco—its history, natural habitat, economic function, political values—and, by extension, about the way we all imagine the places we live in. "A city," Solnit writes in her introduction, "is a particular kind of place, perhaps best described as many worlds in one place; it compounds many versions without reconciling them."
Ordinary maps show only the physical infrastructure that these "many worlds" share—streets, rivers, monuments.
The maps in Infinite City, on the other hand, treat the physical city as a blank slate, on which many different experiences can be overwritten, like texts on a palimpsest.
Exciting urban geography...
Sounds like a fascinating book !!
Comments