ABSTRACT

Through Time and the City: Notes on Rome offers a new approach to exploring cities. Using Rome as a guide, the book follows familiar sites, geographies, and characters in search of their role within a larger narrative that includes the environmental processes required to generate enough space and material for the city, the emergent ecologies to which its buildings play host, and the social patterns its various structures help to organize.

Through Time and the City argues that Rome is made and unmade by an endlessly evolving chorus that has, for better or worse, gained geological legitimacy; that the city absorbs and emits countless artifacts in its search for collective identity; that the city is a platform for the constant staging of negotiations between agents (humans, buildings, plants, animals, pathogens, goods, waste, water) that drive and are driven by the entanglements of climate and culture. This book provides textual and visual frameworks for identifying the material traces, emergent patterns, or speculated futures that expose a city as inseparable from its capacity to change.

chapter Chapter 1|13 pages

On Rome, by Way of Introduction

part Section One|79 pages

Foundational Systems

chapter Chapter 2|41 pages

On a Geological Inheritance

chapter Chapter 3|35 pages

On the Space of Flooding

part Section Two|107 pages

Umbrellas and Indicators

chapter Chapter 4|43 pages

On Climate, Fever, and Force

chapter Chapter 5|37 pages

On the Projective City

chapter Chapter 6|23 pages

On Ritual Urbanism and the Via Papalis

part Section Three|78 pages

Keystones

chapter Chapter 7|31 pages

On the Magnitude of Relics

chapter Chapter 8|37 pages

On Stone, Continuity, and Romanitas

chapter Chapter 9|6 pages

On Time and the City