New York Calling by Marshall Berman

New York Calling by Marshall Berman

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Summary

Taking us back to the streets of New York City where eccentricity and anomie were pervasive, this title unlocks life in the unpolished Apple, where, it seemed, anything could happen. It explains how Uptown has taken over Downtown, as Tom Robbins examines the mayors and would-be mayors who have presided over the transformation.

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New York Calling by Marshall Berman

Taking us back to the streets of New York City where eccentricity and anomie were pervasive, this title unlocks life in the unpolished Apple, where, it seemed, anything could happen. It explains how Uptown has taken over Downtown, as Tom Robbins examines the mayors and would-be mayors who have presided over the transformation.
.. often revealing and almost always poignant ... punctuated with perceptive observations about life in a city with today's new norms. -- Sam Roberts New York Times With Rudy running for President and Hilly Kristal dead, the timing couldn't be better for New York Calling: From Blackout to Bloomberg. This fascinating, enlightening and sometimes irritating collection of essays pokes through the rubble of the past three decades and asks: What is the Apple without its worms - without its grifters, goombahs, B-boys, bohos and bums? Beginning in 1977 - with the Bronx burning and Times Square a septic tank of despair - the book endeavors to trace the path to today's squeegee-free, Disney boomtown. Time Out, New York a mind-opening collection ... Through the lens of New York politics, music, art and counterculture, we hear several, often fascinating takes on essentially the same story: how the squalor, struggles, crime, drugs, and free expression of the 1970s and 1980s gave way to a cleaner and safer city in the subsequent two decades, but one in which commercial development has often trumped, protecting existing residents and preserving a rich past ... the essays, whether read discretely or as a complete work, offer a near unforgettable impression of an era. -- Jason Warshof Financial Times Original essay collections are landmines of missed opportunity - nobody's perfect every time, and assigning editors are stuck with what they're handed. So the success ratio is miraculous here as writers of vastly varying celebrity weigh in on the fate of teeming, polyglot New York City in a rich-get-richer world. For once all five boroughs are accounted for, and a heartening proportion of the contributors still find hope in a place where almost no one under forty can afford the rent. Readable, intelligent, and full of facts not even Marshall Berman knew. -- Robert Christgau Gotham's a Rip Van Winkle city. Always has been. In 1856, Harper's Monthly claimed New York "is never the same city for a dozen years together," and that after forty years a visitor would find "nothing, absolutely nothing, of the New York he knew." But even Rip would be flabbergasted had he fallen asleep in the 1977 blackout and woken up today. New York Calling's perceptive reports and evocative reminiscences vividly recreate the all but vanished city of the '70s - dangerous, broke, aflame, in ruins, but also hip, vital, creative, rebellious - and trace the astonishing transformations wrought over the intervening decades. By turns tender and irate, whimsical and reflective, it's a great guide to Gotham's recent history. -- Mike Wallace New York Calling gives us the New York that doesn't get into the guidebooks - or the history books. With tour guides like Luc Sante, Tom Robbins, and editors Berman and Berger, we can count on an eye-opening journey through a more rough and tumble city, full of problems but bursting with messy life. -- Geoffrey O'Brien, author of Sonata for Jukebox Anyone who knew New York in the 1970s knows it was a different city from that of today. New York Calling is like a Rough Guide to a city receding into a dim past but now brought startlingly, evocatively to life by the amazing group of writers assembled by Marshall Berman and Brian Berger -- Francis Morrone, author of The Architectural Guidebook to New York City with 230 photographs sprinkled throughout, this multivoiced collection establishes itself as a unique document of the city's last three decades. Publishers Weekly

Marshall Berman (Anthology Editor)
Marshall Berman is Distinguished Professor of Political Science at City College of New York and CCNY Graduate Center, where he teaches political theory and urban studies. His books include On The Town: One Hundred Years of Spectacle in Times Square (2006) and All That Is Solid Melts into Air: The Experience of Modernity (1983). Born and raised in the Bronx, he lives in Manhattan with his family.



Brian Berger (Anthology Editor)
Brian Berger is a poet, journalist, and photographer who remembers the view of Playland from the terrace of his grandparents’ apartment in Rockaway Beach, Queens. He has written about music for Forced Exposure, the Austin Chronicle and Geek Weekly, while his verse has appeared at jargonbooks.com and elsewhere. His own dark hollow is www.whowalkinbrooklyn.com

SKU Unavailable
ISBN 13 9781861893383
ISBN 10 1861893388
Title New York Calling
Author Brian Berger
Condition Unavailable
Binding Type Paperback
Publisher Reaktion Books
Year published 2007-09-01
Number of pages 400
Cover note Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
Note Unavailable