ABSTRACT

Literary texts and buildings have always represented space, narrated cultural and political values, and functioned as sites of personal and collective identity. In the twentieth century, new forms of narrative have represented cultural modernity, political idealism and architectural innovation. Writing the Modern City explores the diverse and fascinating relationships between literature, architecture and modernity and considers how they have shaped the world today.

This collection of thirteen original essays examines the ways in which literature and architecture have shaped a range of recognisably ‘modern’ identities. It focuses on the cultural connections between prose narratives – the novel, short stories, autobiography, crime and science fiction – and a range of urban environments, from the city apartment and river to the colonial house and the utopian city. It explores how the themes of memory, nation and identity have been represented in both literary and architectural works in the aftermath of early twentieth-century conflict; how the cultural movements of modernism and postmodernism have affected notions of canonicity and genre in the creation of books and buildings; and how and why literary and architectural narratives are influenced by each other’s formal properties and styles.

The book breaks new ground in its exclusive focus on modern narrative and urban space. The essays examine texts and spaces that have both unsettled traditional definitions of literature and architecture and reflected and shaped modern identities: sexual, domestic, professional and national. It is essential reading for students and researchers of literature, cultural studies, cultural geography, art history and architectural history.

chapter |18 pages

Time, Space and Narrative

Reflections on Architecture, Literature and Modernity

part |75 pages

Memory, Nation, Identity

chapter |11 pages

Remembering and Forgetting

Private and Public Lives in the Imagined Nation

chapter |24 pages

Poets, Tramps and a Town Planner

A Survey of Raymond Unwin's On-site Persona

chapter |22 pages

Unhomely Desire

Dismantling the Walls of Difference in Gora's Kolkata

chapter |16 pages

‘The Past Forsworn'

Colonialism and Counterhistory in the Work of Doris Lessing

part |69 pages

Movement, Culture, Genre

chapter |19 pages

Philip K. Dick's Disturbanism

Towards Psychospatial Readings of Science Fiction

chapter |18 pages

Alexander Trocchi

Glasgow Through the Eye of a Needle

part |62 pages

Narrative, Form, Space

chapter |11 pages

Anonymous Encounters

The Structuring of Space in Postmodern Narratives of the City

chapter |22 pages

Sex Happens

A Phenomenological Reading of the Casual Encounter

chapter |14 pages

‘There are Different Ways of Making the Streets Tell' 1

Narrative, Urban Space and Orientation