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Greater Boston
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Greater Boston
Adapting Regional Traditions to the Present

Sam Bass Warner, Jr.

248 pages | 5 1/2 x 9 | 24 illus.
Cloth 2001 | ISBN 978-0-8122-3607-1 | $55.00s | £36.00 | Add to shopping cart
Paper 2001 | ISBN 978-0-8122-1769-8 | $22.50t | £15.00 | Add to shopping cart
A volume in the Metropolitan Portraits series
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"A study of the economic and social characteristics of greater Boston's cities and suburbs."—Boston Globe

"Affection combined with wisdom is the strength of the book. Warner's acute eyes and ears allow him to realize a lasting portrayal of greater Boston at the beginning of the twenty-first century. . . . Warner's observations about the metropolitan future have national implications."—H-Urban

Selected by Choice magazine as an Outstanding Academic Book, 2001

From eastern Massachusetts to southern New Hampshire, greater Boston is what five million people call home. Drawing on more than thirty years as a resident of Boston himself, renowned urban historian Sam Bass Warner, Jr., reveals a vibrant, ethnically diverse American metropolis, a mixture of cities and small wooded towns, a region built on tradition, yet able to keep pace and set trends in the modern world. Reflecting on the natural environment of greater Boston and interviewing those who live there, Warner provides a fresh portrait of what he shows to be both the nation's oldest and newest urban area.

Warner's exploration of Boston begins with the region's physical setting, its unique geology and geographical development, and a historical description of the rise of the city. He then chronicles contemporary economic life in metropolitan Boston, where innovation and ideas have always been among its greatest resources. But although the city has enjoyed prosperity as a center for new businesses, including mutual fund management and scientific instrumentation, as well as for reworked traditional industries such as textile production and apparel, Warner explains how Boston faces the enduring urban challenges of running public schools, monitoring real estate development, and managing impoverished neighborhoods. It is only now that the city and region's different ethnic groups have begun the difficult but rewarding trend toward a more open and cooperative Boston society, resulting in a compelling new vision of the city. Warner allows Bostonians to speak for themselves as he presents their personal stories about civic life and how they creatively tend to their plans and problems, often by voicing their concerns at open town meetings, a centuries-old New England practice.

Warner then turns to another principal aspect of the region's cultural heritage, music making, the long tradition of which has made Boston a gathering place for the world's finest musicians. Folk revivals and early American music are nurtured in auditoriums and coffee houses dotting the region, while the latest jazz and rock performances flourish alongside well-attended classical concerts. It is this everyday and everywhere music, according to Warner, that illustrates the special and creative quality of greater Boston's public life.

Finally, Warner considers how the metropolis is growing, and how this adaptable town will continue to accommodate new generations of Bostonians while retaining its distinctive character. Throughout, the narrative is accompanied by Warner's own pen-and-ink drawings, contributing to the intimate tone of this metropolitan portrait.

Sam Bass Warner, Jr., is Visiting Professor in the Department of Urban Studies and Planning at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He is the author of The Way We Really Live: Social Change in Metropolitan Boston Since 1920, The Urban Wilderness: A History of the American City, and The Private City: Philadelphia in Three Periods of Its Growth, also published by the University of Pennsylvania Press.

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