
Segregation : a global history of divided cities / Carl H. Nightingale
Enregistré dans:
Auteurs principaux: | Nightingale, Carl H. (Auteur) |
---|---|
Format: | Livre |
Langue: | English |
Publié: | Chicago ; London : The University of Chicago Press, 2012 |
Collection: | Historical studies of urban America
|
Sujets: | |
Accès en ligne: | Rezension (FAZ) Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Table des matières |
---|
Ancestries |
Seventy centuries of city-splitting |
Before race mattered |
The long shadow of the Ziggurat |
Segregating strangers |
Scapegoat ghettos |
Quarters for classes, crafts, clans, castes, and the sexes |
Ancient and medieval legacies |
Color and race come to the city |
White town/black town |
Governor Pitt's Madras |
The rise and fall of American (and South African) segregation in colonial times |
Eastward connections |
The cross-colonial color connection |
Color before race |
Race and the London-Calcutta connection |
The modern way to split a city |
How London conquered and divided Calcutta |
Race and the imperial city |
The London-Calcutta sanitation connection |
The West End's White Town connection |
London's Calcutta problem |
Surges of segregation in the colonies |
The stations Raj |
Paradoxes of detachment and dependence |
Beyond Calcutta |
Stations of the empire |
"Bring your cities and stations within the pale of civilization" |
Stations for sale? |
Beyond India |
Segregating the Pacific |
Incomings and outgoings |
Segregating China's gateways |
Tides in the Pacific |
Segregating all oceans |
Segregation mania |
A call to all continents |
The germ theory of segregation |
Segregation sails East with the plague |
Hunting rats, fleas, and mosquitoes in Africa |
The high tide of segregation mania |
The long end of the craze |
Legacies of the mania |
The outer limits of colonial urbanism |
Imperial monuments, imperial tombstones |
French connections |
A French Calcutta? |
Planet Haussmann |
Splitting cities, beaux-arts style |
Sunset at New Delhi |
A bitter epitaph |
The archsegregationists |
The multifarious segregation of Johannesburg |
Archsegregationism and the wider world |
Squaring race and civilization |
A keystone of global anglo-saxondom |
The birth of "separate development" |
From labor control to "influx control" |
Grandparents of the group areas |
The furies fly in the settlers' city |
Arrogance and its agonies |
The intimacies of race war |
They will buy us out of the country |
Pandora's segregationism |
The birth pangs of nation-state segregation |
Camouflaging the color line in Chicago |
A subtler sort of segregation? |
Segregating the United States |
Jim-crowing the neighborhoods |
Segregation by profiteer, protective association, and pogrom |
A time for camouflage |
The "iron ring"? |
Segregation at the extremes |
Split cities and the global cataclysm |
Hitler's "death boxes" |
A new deal for America's color lines |
The sinister synthesis of apartheid |
Fragmented legacies |
Outflanking a global revolution |
Age of liberation, age of apocalypse |
Have ghettos gone global? |
Postcolonial and neocolonial city-splitting |
A new century of settler segregation? |
Epilogue: people, the planet, and segregated cities |