Hollow City Quotes
Hollow City: The Siege of San Francisco and the Crisis of American Urbanism
by
Rebecca Solnit228 ratings, 3.76 average rating, 36 reviews
Open Preview
Hollow City Quotes
Showing 1-3 of 3
“By the twentieth century, it was becoming a center for immigrant Italian anarchists, Wobblies and union organizers—“not only the most tightly organized city in America but … the stronghold of trade unionism in the United States,” asserted Carey McWilliams.14 Conscientious objectors flocked here after World War II, and the poets who would later be celebrated as beats and as the San Francisco Renaissance started coming in the 1940s and 1950s; African-American emigration to the wartime jobs of San Francisco produced another postwar cultural”
― Hollow City: The Siege of San Francisco and the Crisis of American Urbanism
― Hollow City: The Siege of San Francisco and the Crisis of American Urbanism
“What is happening here eats out the heart of the city from the inside: the infrastructure is for the most part being added to rather than torn down, but the life within it is being drained away, a siphoning off of diversity, cultural life, memory, complexity. What remains will look like the city that was—or like a brighter, shinier, tidier version of it—but what it contained will be gone. It will be a hollow city.”
― Hollow City: The Siege of San Francisco and the Crisis of American Urbanism
― Hollow City: The Siege of San Francisco and the Crisis of American Urbanism
“Artmaking has been, at least since bohemia and modernism appeared in 19th century Paris, largely an urban enterprise: the closer to museums, publishers, audiences, patrons, politicians, other enemies, and each other, the better for artists and for art. For if cities have been essential to artists, artists have been essential to cities...Being an artist was one way of being a participant in the debate about meaning and value, and the closer to the center of things is the more one can participate. This is part of what makes urbanity worth celebrating, this braiding together of disparate lives, but the new gentrification threatens to yank out some strands together, diminishing urbanism itself. Perhaps the new urbanism will result in old cities that function like suburbs as those who were suburbia's blandly privileged take them over.”
― Hollow City: The Siege of San Francisco and the Crisis of American Urbanism
― Hollow City: The Siege of San Francisco and the Crisis of American Urbanism
