Book contents
- Earthopolis
- Earthopolis
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Maps
- Introduction Our Urban Planet in Space and Time
- Prologue Before and Beyond: Big Things in Tiny Places
- Part One Cities of the Rivers
- Part Two Cities of the World Ocean
- Part Three Cities of Hydrocarbon
- Chapter 10 Chimneys to Smokestacks
- Chapter 11 Planet of the People I: The Atlantic Cauldron
- Chapter 12 Planet of the People II: Feminists, Abolitionists, and los liberales
- Chapter 13 Weapons of World Conquest
- Chapter 14 Capitalist Explosions
- Chapter 15 The Pharaohs of Flow
- Chapter 16 Planet of the People III: An Urban Majority Takes Its Space
- Chapter 17 Lamps Out
- Chapter 18 The Labyrinths of Terror
- Chapter 19 Gathering Velocities I: Tailpipe Tracts and Tower Blocks
- Chapter 20 Gathering Velocities II: Liberation and “Development”
- Chapter 21 Greatest Accelerations I: New Empires, New Multitudes
- Chapter 22 Greatest Accelerations II: Shacks and Citadels
- Chapter 23 Greatest Accelerations III: Pleasure Palaces and Sweatshops
- Chapter 24 Great Accelerations IV: Maximal Hydrocarbon, Maximal Waste
- Chapter 25 2020 Hindsight … and Foresight?
- Acknowledgments
- Notes
- Index
Chapter 12 - Planet of the People II: Feminists, Abolitionists, and los liberales
from Part Three - Cities of Hydrocarbon
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 May 2022
- Earthopolis
- Earthopolis
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Maps
- Introduction Our Urban Planet in Space and Time
- Prologue Before and Beyond: Big Things in Tiny Places
- Part One Cities of the Rivers
- Part Two Cities of the World Ocean
- Part Three Cities of Hydrocarbon
- Chapter 10 Chimneys to Smokestacks
- Chapter 11 Planet of the People I: The Atlantic Cauldron
- Chapter 12 Planet of the People II: Feminists, Abolitionists, and los liberales
- Chapter 13 Weapons of World Conquest
- Chapter 14 Capitalist Explosions
- Chapter 15 The Pharaohs of Flow
- Chapter 16 Planet of the People III: An Urban Majority Takes Its Space
- Chapter 17 Lamps Out
- Chapter 18 The Labyrinths of Terror
- Chapter 19 Gathering Velocities I: Tailpipe Tracts and Tower Blocks
- Chapter 20 Gathering Velocities II: Liberation and “Development”
- Chapter 21 Greatest Accelerations I: New Empires, New Multitudes
- Chapter 22 Greatest Accelerations II: Shacks and Citadels
- Chapter 23 Greatest Accelerations III: Pleasure Palaces and Sweatshops
- Chapter 24 Great Accelerations IV: Maximal Hydrocarbon, Maximal Waste
- Chapter 25 2020 Hindsight … and Foresight?
- Acknowledgments
- Notes
- Index
Summary
Chapter 12 of Earthopolis: A Biography of Our Urban Planet continues the book’s exploration of cities’ role as creators and creations of the age of revolution. The revolution in Paris gave a boost to feminist movements in many Atlantic cities, movements for the emancipation of Jews that opened the gates of Europe’s ghettos, and the movement to abolish slavery. It visits colonial cities and plantations in French Saint-Domingue to follow the most radical revolution of the era – the uprising of enslaved people that resulted in the independence of a black republic of Haiti. After Napoleon Bonaparte seized power in Paris, using his armies to spread populist dictatorships to other European capitals and re-impose slavery in the Americas, he gave new impetus to abolitionism in Britain and the United States while destabilizing the centuries-old webs of imperial power that radiated from Madrid and Lisbon to Mexico City, Lima, and Rio de Janeiro. French revolutionary ideas inspired leaders based in the numerous spaces across Iberian America identified as “liberal” cities to cut those ties and found new nation states.
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- Information
- EarthopolisA Biography of Our Urban Planet, pp. 293 - 308Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022