The urban imaginary as a social and economic factor

Verfasser: Munck, Bert _de_
Bellavitis, Anna
Dokumenttyp:Aufsatz
Erscheinungsjahr:2017
Vorlageform:by Bert De Munck, Anna Bellavitis
Schlagwort: Stadt
Kreativität
Innovation
Kreative Stadt
Wissen
Gedanken
Institution
Politik
Stadt-Land-Beziehung
Großstadt
Kleinstadt
Wirtschaftlicher Erfolg
Machtstrukturen
Produktqualität
Gesellschaftliche Gruppen
Geschichte 1400-1700
Fußnoten:Abstract: This chapter focuses on the institutional and political context and its connection with the relationship between town and countryside and between large and small cities. It argues that the economic success of cities cannot simply be attributed to economies of scale and agglomeration and that power is always involved - up to and including military power. The chapter shows that broader urban imaginaries from at least the Renaissance on amalgamated with imaginaries about the creative, innovative and successful individual. It also shows that product quality, too, was an ideological construction, resulting moreover from a process in which the urban context was implicated. The chapter suggests that the urban imaginary could thus work to the benefit of different power groups - be they artists or artisans, merchants or producers. The expansion of the ancient 'city-state', as in Venice, Florence or Milan, accomplished during the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, implied the annexation of important urban centres, with a strong cultural, economic and political tradition.
Quelle:Cities and creativity from the Renaissance to the present / Ilja Van Damme et al. (eds.) - London: Routledge, 2017. - (Routledge advnces in urban history ; 1), ISBN 978-0-367-88642-4, Seite 45-64
Signatur:Ak 4901
Permalink:https://istg.uni-muenster.de/bibliographie/Record/6210T40143993
Links:DOI