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Moralising Space: The Utopian Urbanism of the British Positivists, 1855-1920 / Edition 1
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Moralising Space: The Utopian Urbanism of the British Positivists, 1855-1920 / Edition 1
Current price: $54.95
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Barnes and Noble
Moralising Space: The Utopian Urbanism of the British Positivists, 1855-1920 / Edition 1
Current price: $54.95
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Curiously the British Positivists’ work has never been the focus of a full-length study on modern sociology and town planning. In this intellectual history, Matthew Wilson shows that through to the interwar period affiliates to the British Positivist Society – Richard Congreve, Frederic Harrison, Charles Booth, Patrick Geddes and Victor Branford – attempted to realise Comte’s vision. With scarcely used source material Wilson presents the Positivists as an organised resistance to imperialism, industrial exploitation, poverty and despondency. Much to the consternation of the church, state and landed aristocracy they organised urban interventions, led ad hoc sociological surveys and published programmes for realising idyllic city-communities. Effectively this book contributes to our understanding of how Positivism, as a utopian spatial design praxis, heavily influenced twentieth-century architecture and planning.