Sanctuaries of the City: Lessons from Tokyo

Front Cover
Routledge, Apr 1, 2016 - Social Science - 220 pages
This book proposes that we can learn from Tokyo about the instrinsic importance of in-between realms to an international culture: the sanctuaries. It argues that certain urban societies are more robust than others because they offer socio-spatial capacities that enable the development of skills for coping with modern forms of living. It studies places that may open the way to an international culture, namely market places, venues for performing arts and religious sites, which - with particular reference to the Durkheimian tradition - are considered here in their quality as sanctuaries. From its empirical analysis of such sanctuaries in Tokyo, this book develops a more general theory about mega-cities, urban sociability and identity.
 

Contents

List of Figures
1924
Sanctuaries of the City Lessons from Tokyo
1935
PARTI URBAN SANCTUARYRESEARCH
1943
Sanctuaries for Coming to Terms with Modernity
1950
Urban SanctuaryResearch
1973
Sanctuaries of Urban Virtues a View from Architecture
1991
A PLACEHISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE
2005
Approaching the Orient
The Jolly Good Market Place
Sanctuaries for Performing Arts
The Sacred Sanctuary
LESSONS FROM TOKYO
Postlude
References
Index

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About the author (2016)

Anni Greve, Associate Professor of Sociology at the Department of Society and Globalisation, Roskilde University, Denmark

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