Ebenezer Howard: The Genesis of a Town Planning Movement
1969; Taylor & Francis; Volume: 35; Issue: 6 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1080/01944366908977258
ISSN2376-7871
Autores Tópico(s)American History and Culture
ResumoAbstract Nineteenth century communitarian activity was to many a search for forms of community that rested on cooperation, fraternity, and economic progress. First viewed as a response to the excesses of the capitalist order and in particular the inhumanity of the early factory system, communitarianism was, toward the end of the century, considered an alternative to the rapid rise of the industrial city. Ebenezer Howard, who was personally attracted to the variety and vitality of the metropolis, began to believe in the 1880's that its immensity, incurable physical and social problems, and divorce from nature proscribed the symbiotic relationships needed for individual fulfillment and societal progress. He sought to invent a new type of human settlement whose size, scale, and planned order would lead to development of rational communities for an industrial age. His vision of community combined a nineteenth century enlightened view of human nature and needs with an anticipation of twentieth century technology to produce what he viewed as the ideal physical-social environment. The Garden City was to encourage personal freedom and new forms of social and economic cooperation while allowing for order and control.
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