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Table of Contents
Cover
Front Matter
Half Title
Title Page
Copyright information
Dedication
Contents
Figures
About the Authors
Acknowledgements
Chapters Int-Con
Introduction
Background
Types of Feminism
Selection Criteria
Analysis
The Utopian Visionaries
Arturo Soria y Mata's Ciudad Lineal
Ebenezer Howard's Garden City
Frank Lloyd Wright's Broadacre City
Tony Garnier's Cité Industrielle
Bruno Taut's Stadtkrone
Le Corbusier's Cité Radieuse
Antonio Sant'Elia's Città Nuova
Nikolay Milyutin's Sotsgorod
The Rational Functionalists
Titus Salt's and George Pullman's model mill towns
Georges-Eugène Haussmann and the transformation of Paris
Ildefons Cerdà and Barcelona's Eixample plan
Otto Wagner's Die Grossstadt and Vienna's masterplan
Josef Stübben's struggle to balance tradition and modernity
Daniel Burnham's plan of Chicago and the City Beautiful
Patrick Geddes and the advent of biological ideas in planning
John Nolen's merging of nature and urbanism
Patrick Abercrombie's professionalised planning process
The Romantic Archaists
Frederick Law Olmsted's urban parks and garden suburbs
Camillo Sitte and city planning as an artistic endeavour
Raymond Unwin and the return to picturesque village life
Synthesis
Central Themes in Masculine Early Utopias
Women's Different Planning Preoccupations
Conclusion
End Matter
References
Notes
Introduction
Analysis
Synthesis
Conclusion
Front Matter
Half Title
Title Page
Copyright information
Dedication
Contents
Figures
About the Authors
Acknowledgements
Chapters Int-Con
Introduction
Background
Types of Feminism
Selection Criteria
Analysis
The Utopian Visionaries
Arturo Soria y Mata's Ciudad Lineal
Ebenezer Howard's Garden City
Frank Lloyd Wright's Broadacre City
Tony Garnier's Cité Industrielle
Bruno Taut's Stadtkrone
Le Corbusier's Cité Radieuse
Antonio Sant'Elia's Città Nuova
Nikolay Milyutin's Sotsgorod
The Rational Functionalists
Titus Salt's and George Pullman's model mill towns
Georges-Eugène Haussmann and the transformation of Paris
Ildefons Cerdà and Barcelona's Eixample plan
Otto Wagner's Die Grossstadt and Vienna's masterplan
Josef Stübben's struggle to balance tradition and modernity
Daniel Burnham's plan of Chicago and the City Beautiful
Patrick Geddes and the advent of biological ideas in planning
John Nolen's merging of nature and urbanism
Patrick Abercrombie's professionalised planning process
The Romantic Archaists
Frederick Law Olmsted's urban parks and garden suburbs
Camillo Sitte and city planning as an artistic endeavour
Raymond Unwin and the return to picturesque village life
Synthesis
Central Themes in Masculine Early Utopias
Women's Different Planning Preoccupations
Conclusion
End Matter
References
Notes
Introduction
Analysis
Synthesis
Conclusion