Second Suburb: Levittown, Pennsylvania

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Product Details
Price
$55.00  $51.15
Publisher
University of Pittsburgh Press
Publish Date
Pages
448
Dimensions
7.0 X 9.5 X 1.0 inches | 2.5 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9780822962816

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About the Author
Dianne Harris is dean of the College of Arts & Sciences at the University of Washington. From 2017-2021 she was a senior program officer at the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. Prior to that she served as dean of the College of Humanities and as professor of history at the University of Utah. Among her most recent publications are Second Suburb: Levittown, Pennsylvania and Little White Houses: How the Postwar Home Constructed Race in America. She is also editor of the book series Culture, Politics, and the Built Environment.
Reviews
Levittown, we are told, was a 'cruel parody' of the American Dream, offering neither urban stimulation nor rural rejuvenation, and Levittown buyers too deluded or too unsophisticated to understand possibilities and the limitations of what they were sold. There was always evidence to belie that stereotype for those willing to see it, yet only recently have we begun to explore in depth the complexity of the Levittown phenomenon. In the essays, recollections, and interviews gathered here, we see a complex community in which visual sameness is nearly absent and political passivity, social isolation, and cultural philistinism are rare.-- "Dell Upton, University of California at Los Angeles"
Looking at Levittown from inside and out, this collection illuminates the suburban condition in all of its complexity. By assembling multiple voices to tell the rich, conflicted, and often surprising story of this archetypical American place, Dianne Harris has made a major contribution to the growing field of suburban history.-- "Margaret Crawford, University of California, Berkeley"
Superb study . . . Dell Upton's foreword, recounting his parents' experiences in a Levitton-like development, is the perfect set-up, recounting some of the 'idiosyncratic twistings and turnings [that] lie behind the received story of suburbanization and white flight'.-- "Pittsburgh Post-Gazette"
A model multidisciplinary study . . . The generous selection of images in each essay highlights the variety of print and material artifacts perceptively analyzed.-- "Choice"
Handsomely produced with an extensive number of photographs, floor plans, cartoons, and advertisements, 'Second Suburb' provides a solid, smart contribution to our understanding of postwar suburbs by viewing a single suburban community through multiple histosrical lenses.-- "Pennsylvania Magazine of History & Biography"
Rich and diverse . . . Harris has assembled a stellar group of scholars to explore various dimensions of Levittown' s architecture, history, politics and culture. . . . Indispensable for readers commited to a more comprehehsive understanding of race in America.-- "Tikkun"
A model multi-disciplinary study.-- "Choice"
A revealing analysis of how such a community of strangers with varying backgrounds were able (or unable in some cases) to learn to live and play and shop and worship together at an important time in American history.-- "Pennsylvania Magazine"
The multifaceted approach works remarkably well to underline the multiple experiences that make us this 'second suburb's' history. The result is a deeper understanding of the ins and outs of Levittown, Pennsylvania, in which the multiplicity of voices come together to produce a valuable addition to the studies of locations that have proliferated in recent literature on suburban growth in the post-1945 era.-- "Technology and Culture"