The Inevitable Specificity of Cities

What is a city? What deter­mi­nes its spe­ci­fi­ci­ty? What shapes its qua­li­ty? The evo­lu­ti­on of the con­tem­po­ra­ry city does not fol­low a line­ar movement—it is shaped by trans­for­ma­ti­on pro­ces­ses that are direc­ted toward often distant and con­flic­ting goals. Even though cities are inscri­bed into glo­bal pro­ces­ses and net­works, they tend to pro­du­ce and repro­du­ce their own spe­ci­fi­ci­ty, their own pat­terns and cha­rac­te­ristic traits.

The aim of this book is not to pro­mo­te a roman­tic view of the city, nor a dis­cus­sion of spe­ci­fi­ci­ty as a means to argue against glo­ba­li­sa­ti­on. It is not a hymn to con­tex­tua­li­ty nor is it a plea for the return of the geni­us loci. This book takes an uncom­pro­mi­sing look at urban ter­ri­to­ries in various parts of the world. It iden­ti­fies spe­ci­fic cha­rac­te­ristics that are not spec­ta­cu­lar and would not be used on pic­tu­re post­cards. Ins­tead, they con­vey a spe­ci­fic pro­fi­le of urban pat­terns that under­pin the uni­que­ness of the city’s mate­ri­al and social exis­tence. This the­sis only reve­als its full signi­fi­can­ce and explo­si­ve­ness in the con­text of glo­ba­li­sa­ti­on, the glo­bal exten­si­on of net­works of pro­duc­tion and con­sump­ti­on, the homo­ge­nisa­ton of living con­di­ti­ons and dai­ly life on a glo­bal sca­le, and the ensuing spread of urban are­as over the planet.

Using the cate­go­ries of ter­ri­to­ry, power, and difference—which also lent the book its structure—the texts ana­ly­se case stu­dies of cities and urba­nis­ed ter­ri­to­ries, from Nap­les and the Cana­ry Islands to Hong Kong and Nairobi.

Aut­hors: Roger Die­ner, Mathi­as Gunz, Manu­el Herz, Jac­ques Her­zog, Rolf Jen­ni, Jas­mi­ne Kas­ta­ni, Mar­cel Mei­li, Pierre de Meu­ron, Shadi Rah­ba­ran, Chris­ti­an Schmid, Mili­ca Topalović

Edi­ted by ETH Stu­dio Basel

Zurich: Lars Müller Publishers, 2015
English
17.6 x 24 cm
312 pages
263 images
ISBN 978–3‑03778–374‑0

Open Access