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| Courtesy of Illicit Cultural Property. |
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| Courtesy of Builders Booksource. |
This weeks reading was from Delores Hayden’s book, “The
Power of Place: Urban Landscaping as Public History.” The first section, “Claiming Urban Landscapes as Public
History,” “proposes new ways to understand the urban cultural landscape” and is
broken up into three chapters (xii).
The first chapter “Contested Terrain” looks at Herbert J. Gans and Ada
Louise Huxtable’s debate over the preservation of “historic landmarks” and what
made a building worth saving and preserving. Gans and Huxtable both agreed that preserving the built
history was important but disagreed on what should be preserved; Gans wanted
more social history while Huxtable wanted more culture. Hayden argues that “the power of place-
the power of ordinary landscapes to nurture citizens’ public memory, to
encompass shared time in the form of shared territory- remains untapped” for
ethnic and women’s history (9).
The
second chapter “Urban Landscape History: The Sense of Place and the Politics of
Space,” looks at what “place” is and how people view it differently. People of different ethnic groups and
women view places very differently and areas histories have been shaped from
the separation of women and those who are ethnically different. “Political divisions of territory split
the urban world into many enclaves experienced from many different
perspectives.” (27)
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| Courtesy of PennDesign. |
The
third chapter “Place Memory and Urban Preserving,” looks at how urban landscape
is connected to memory and is an important resource for public history. The Brass Workers History and the New
York Chinatown History Project are examples of community oral history. In recent years, more areas that are
connected to ethnic communities and women’s history have been preserved, such
as the Boston African American National Historic Site and a Women’s Rights
National Historical Park at Seneca Falls, New York.



Good blog Taylor. Reading this book reminds me of all my good fishing holes. I moved down south about 28 years ago. (Florida, Tenn). When I moved back, almost all of my fishing holes had not changed from when I left. When she writes about identity, that is what I thought of. Their not historical to others, but their historical to me for a number of reasons, first place where....etc.
ReplyDeleteI liked the second chapter quote you used. Depending on the person, everyone has specific memories linked with the same places, but these differences are not always represented in historical preservations.
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