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Modern planning on film: Re-shaping space, image and representation

Lookup NU author(s): Professor Mark Tewdwr-Jones

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Abstract

The city and its representations in film and photography provide unique perspectives from which one can interpret urban places in ways that the approaches of the traditional social sciences often do not permit. Above all, film provided a unique lens through which to analyze contemporary change or urban histories in ways that were not at the time used in formal academic discourses. Some of these depictions were fictional, narrative story lines involving crime capers, car chases, and the noir side of urban life; others, set in suburbia, were gentle family comedies, involving on-going light-hearted tensions between the different values of members of a family or a circle of friends; while others, documentary or realist in tone, demonstrated in a much more graphic way, perhaps, the consequences of change, the inadequacy of the state, or the exclusion of societies in particular settings.


Publication metadata

Author(s): Tewdwr-Jones M

Publication type: Article

Publication status: Published

Journal: Berkeley Planning Journal

Year: 2013

Volume: 26

Issue: 1

Pages: 86-106

ISSN (print): 1047-5192

Publisher: University of California


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