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Book cover of The Geography of Towns
Urban Sociology - General & Miscellaneous, City Planning & Urban Design, Urban Growth, World History - General & Miscellaneous, Europe - British Architecture

The Geography of Towns

by Arthur Smailes
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Overview

When first released much praise was given to this book: "An outstanding book on urban geography. . . representative of the best on this subject."—Higher Education Journal "The book ought to be required reading for every planner and student of planning . . . a magnificent achievement." —Town and Country Planning.

The Geography of Towns provides a concise but thorough introduction to the important subject of urban geography. It traces the development of urban areas from the earliest sites of Nineveh, Aleppo, and Agade to modern megalopolises and strip cities, and deals authoritatively with problems of classification and ranking, location and type, origins, and course of development, and the relationship of the city to its region and nation.

All facets of urban geography are covered, including the core, integuments, population structure, land-use patterns, enclaves, and town structure. Population mobility and the continual crisscross circulation of populations within and between town and region are seen as important forces affecting the internal geography of towns. The author questions the usefulness or validity of such terms as "neighborhood" and stresses the need for more meaningful conceptualizations and vocabulary.

One of the fundamental problems connected with urban geography is to assist in the planning of future cities. This book contributes substantially to an understanding of the interrelations of town and region and to an understanding of the components of the city itself which are essential to intelligent planning for the future.

Arthur E. Smailes (1911-1984) was professor of geography, University of London. He was founder member of the Institute of British Geographers and also served as its secretary. In his career, he was granted a chair at Queen Mary College which later became the first chair of geography and was the recipient of the Research Medal of the Royal Scottish Geographical Society.

Synopsis

The Geography of Towns provides a concise but thorough introduction to the important subject of urban geography. It traces the development of urban areas from the earliest sites of Nineveh, Aleppo, and Agade to modern megalopolises and strip cities, and deals authoritatively with problems of classifi cation and ranking, location and type, origins, and course of development, and the relationship of the city to its region and nation.

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Editorials

From the Publisher

“Writing a small volume in a planned series, Mr. Smailes has had to work within the limits of about 150 pages of text, and has confined his references mainly to works available in English. His book is therefore, essentially a study of urbanism in Great Britain… Smailes has traced the course of urbanism, as expressed through the development of cities, from very early times; he has analysed the more important conditions of emplacement of cities and towns; has displayed the commoner features of their morphology by reference to numerous examples in various parts of the world; and has demonstrated the existence of a pattern of “urban fields” in Great Britain which ought to claim the attention of all rural and urban planning authorities.” —M. A. The Geographical Journal “In spite of its extreme brevity, this book is the best treatment of the field of urban geography so far available in the English language… Smailes has made a very significant contribution to the literature of urban geography by providing a well-balanced systematic treatment.” —Harold M. Mayer, Economic Geography (Reviewed together with another book) “These two books are what they purport to be: compact, abbreviated, but intrinsically interesting introductions to the geography of cities…. [T]hey will provide insights on how the anthropologists can relate the potsherds that he digs up with the social setting in which they occurred or how he can connect the lives of his informants to the material stage upon which they move.” —Miles Richardson, American Anthropologist “In spite of the rapid growth of urban centers in Great Britain in the last two centuries, relatively little attention has been given to the systematic study of this aspect of geography. Perhaps to no other scholar in the British Isles is more owed for his untiring work in the field of urban geography than to the author of this recent volume… Mr. Smailes has compressed within a small compass the essence of his lifelong study but has nevertheless presented it in an attractive, stimulating, and readable form… Mr. Smailes’s book is a most stimulating summary of this branch of applied geography and will be valuable not only to geographers but also to architects and planners, who frequently adopt a far too specialized approach to the construction and reconstruction of urban centers.” —George J. Eltringham, The Geographical Review

Book Details

Published
December 1, 2007
Publisher
Transaction Publishers
Pages
164
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780202309965

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