Research Catalog

The uses of disorder : personal identity & city life.

Title
The uses of disorder : personal identity & city life.
Author
Sennett, Richard, 1943-
Publication
New York, Knopf, 1970.

Items in the Library & Off-site

Filter by

1 Item

StatusFormatAccessCall NumberItem Location
TextRequest in advance HM 201 S478u 1970Off-site

Holdings

Details

Description
xvii, 198 p.; 22 cm.
Summary
Richard Sennett is one of the world's leading sociologists, and this book, first published in 1970, was his first single-authored work. It launched his exploration of communities and how they live in cities, and outlined his view that order breeds narrow, violence-prone lives, while an 'equilibrium of disorder' brings vigour and diversity to urban life. "The New York Times" described it as 'the best available contemporary defence of anarchism'. "The Uses of Disorder" followed the student and urban rebellions of the late 1960s. But it remains uncannily apposite to the problems of city life forty years on. In a new preface Sennett considers the response to the book over those years, and relates it to the circumstances faced by the inhabitants of cities in the twenty-first century. The body of the text remains unchanged, ready for a new generation of readers.
Uniform Title
Power and Morality Collection at Harvard Business School
Subjects
Processing Action (note)
  • committed to retain
Contents
Introduction -- Part One: A New Puritanism. 1. Purified identity -- 2. The Myth of a Purified Community -- 3. How cities Bring the Myth to Life -- 4. Planning Purified Cities -- Part Two: A New Anarchism. Introduction to part Two. 5. Outgrowing a Purified Identity -- 6. The Good Uses of the City -- 7. The City as an Anarchic System -- 8. Conclusion: Ordinary Lives in Disorder.
LCCN
^^^71106628^
OCLC
  • 81624
  • SCSB-14249415
Owning Institutions
Harvard Library