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European Urbanities since 1945: A Commentary
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 October 2015
Extract
Europe's history since 1945 has most commonly been seen through the prism of international politics and economic change, from post-war reconstruction to late twentieth-century deindustrialisation. Urban history has been tangential to these accounts. Hence Leif Jerram's call to arms in his book Streetlife, published in 2011: ‘it is time to put the where into the what and why of history’. The history of Europe's twentieth century, Jerram declared, happened ‘in the streets and factories, cinemas and nightclubs, housing estates and suburbs, offices and living rooms, shops and swimming baths of Europe's booming cities’.
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- Information
- Contemporary European History , Volume 24 , Special Issue 4: Urban Societies in Europe , November 2015 , pp. 617 - 622
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- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2015
References
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8 In some cases those involved could encompass all three dimensions. The housing charity Shelter was founded in London in 1966 by Bruce Kenrick, a minister of the United Reform Church who was also a supporter of the Cuban revolution and Latin American liberation theology. On the crisis in London's housing in the 1960s see White, Jerry, London in the Twentieth Century (London: Vintage, 2008), 46–51Google Scholar.
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13 The work of Elizabeth Buettner is important here. See her ‘“Going for an Indian”: South Asian Restaurants and the Limits of Multiculturalism in Britain’, Journal of Modern History, 80, 4 (2008), 865–901 and forthcoming monograph Europe After Empire: Decolonization, Society and Culture (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2014).
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