52 Matching Annotations
  1. Nov 2015
  2. learn-us-east-1-prod-fleet02-xythos.content.blackboardcdn.com learn-us-east-1-prod-fleet02-xythos.content.blackboardcdn.com
    1. It was a freak of fancy in my friend (for what else shall I call it?) to be enamoredof the Night for her own sake; and into this bizarrerie, as into all his others, Iquietly fell; giving myself up to his wild whims with a perfect abandon.

      Contributes to the narrative that the city is a bizarre place of unusual circumstances and experiences.

    1. The wild effects of the light enchained me to an examination of individual faces; andalthough the rapidity with which the world of light flitted before the window, prevented me fromcasting more than a glance upon each visage

      Stole the anonymity of the ones being observed.

    2. modest young girls returning from long and late labor to a cheerlesshome, and shrinking more tearfully than indignantly from the glances of ruffians,

      Relates to Collie's analysis of de Certeau - the dangers of the city for a woman.

  3. gimmeshelter2015.files.wordpress.com gimmeshelter2015.files.wordpress.com
    1. j_:.,_~ (You had to an . . . . ._h_h .. e ...... r-e t()'01fsCti1ie destrucuon. humanistic tnump . -...... --------------:---------__ ... __ _

      Emphasizes the dehumanizing aspect to the modernist movement.

    2. cally as ~.b_Qlic expressi9n~_()f ... rnQd~r.o.ity: Central Par

      Its interesting to think about Olmstead and Vaux' perspective as modernity. I don't think they would have agreed with the modernist movement in urban planning, especially as it moves away from the individual and focuses on the masses.

    1. here is, however, one important exception to the rule that 1t rakes a ~ide functional mixture of users to populate and enliv~n a neighborhood park through the day.

      Central Park fulfills this role, I think.

    2. Does anything about this physical arrangement of the neighbor-hood affect the park physically? Yes. This mixture of uses of buildings directly produces for the park a mixture of users who enter and leave the park at different times. They use the park at different times from one another because their daily schedules differ. The park thus possesses an intricate sequence of uses and users

      This is really interesting, I hadn't considered this before. An example of this could be the way in which socio-economic differences in neighborhoods affects visitation.

    1. e officials they controlled allowed all public roads not needed for their own access to their estates to fall into disrepair to discourage public use.

      Another example of how city planning is used to shape how people use a spae.

    2. hese were the men who, during the "Middle Ages of American in-dustry," the half century of unbridled industrial expansion following the Civil War, had harnessed America's vast mineral resources and tapped its long-stored capital to create needed industrial growth but who, to turn that growth into personal wealth, had stationed themselves at the "narrow~" of production, the key points of production and distribution, and exacted tnbute from the nation.

      Interesting how it's still like this today - the rich business tycoons run New York and the legislature.

  4. Oct 2015
  5. apartmentstories2016.files.wordpress.com apartmentstories2016.files.wordpress.com
    1. Mortals dwell in that they save the earth

      We've discussed how building is related to dwelling, so it's interesting to see how dwelling also relates to saving the earth. We often see building as the opposite of saving the earth, so I'm curious to understand how they can both be forms of dwelling.

    2. Earth is the serving bearer, blossoming and fruiting, spreading out in rock and water, rising up into plant and animal. When we say earth, we are already thinking of the other three along with it, but we give no thought to the simple oneness of the four.

      This is where we get the concept of the fourfold really explained.

    1. Maps, on the other hand, function strategically to colonise space, rendering geographical knowledge as an abstract, ahistorical place that erases the spatial practices that are the condition of its possibility.

      This combines the ideas we've discussed with mapping and the ideas about space vs. place. She says that place is made through mapping, by taking the space and defining it.

    2. thus the street geometrically defined by urban planning is transformed into a space by walkers.

      I think that Collie uses "space" the way that we have been defining "place" in our conversations about the differences between the two words.

    3. re-use culture and “reappropriate the space organised by techniques of sociocultural production”

      Reminds me of Whyte's ideas about the ways in which the interaction between the city and the people changes. How people use the city spaces and how they don't, and how urban planning must acknowledge and respond to that.

    1. ~practices of space refer to a specific form of operations ("ways of operating"), to "another spatiality"6 (an "anthropological," poetic and mythic experience of space),

      This relates to Tuan's ideas about space and place, and our definition of space as something intangible or empty, while place is specific.

    2. ro be hfted to the summit of the World Trade Cent . o t f h . ' er ts to be l'f . u o t e City s grasp

      "The city's grasp" reminds me of the personification of New York. We wouldn't usually say that a place has grasped a person, or that anyone is trapped or held by a space. That's something that's unique to New York.

  6. Sep 2015
    1. From the security and stability of place we are awareof the openness, freedom, and threat of space, and vice versa

      The threat of space seems especially important in the city, where private versus public space is constantly changing and a difficult concept to understand fully.

  7. gimmeshelter2015.files.wordpress.com gimmeshelter2015.files.wordpress.com
    1. It is that shape, color, or arrangement which facilitates the making of vividly identified, powerfully structured, highly useful mental images of the environmen

      This recalls the earlier idea that the city is made up of different sights, sounds, smells, etc

    2. Like any good framework, such a structure gives the individual a pos-sibility of choice md a starting-point for the acquisition of fur-ther information.

      This touches on the organization of the city as a grid

    3. This book will assert that legibility is crucial in the city setting, will analyze it in some detail, and will try to show how this concept might be used today in rebuilding our cities

      The author's thesis statement

    1. Hell, maybe your kin will survive the apocalypse and sing mighty ballads of your tragic battles by a roaring bonfire.

      He calls New York a monster earlier on ("Cthulhu" and "Galactus"), and now compares surviving New York to surviving the apocalypse.

    1. the heroine is no longer as optimistic as she once was.

      This can be compared to our conversation about the jaded bitterness and love/hate relationship that native New Yorkers feel towards the city.