Burrows, Edwin G.; Wallace, Mike

Gotham

Gotham
  • Verlag: Oxford University Press
  • Erscheinungsdatum: 2001-03-01
  • Format: Taschenbuch
  • Umfang: 1424
  • ISBN: 0195140494
  • EAN: 9780195140491
  • Amazon.de Verkaufsrang: 151.630
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Beschreibung von buecher.de

In this epic, Pulitzer Prize-winning work, Burrows and Wallace have produced a monumental history of New York City--ranging from the Indian tribes that settled the island of Manna-hatta to the consolidation of the five boroughs into New York in 1898. 150 halftones. 15 maps.

Aus der Amazon.de-Redaktion

Dieser Titel ist in englischer Sprache.

Wie New York City, die Stadt die es feiert, ist Gotham gewaltig und endlos faszinierend. Zwei Jahrzehnte lang recherchierten die Historiker Edwin G. Burrows und Mike Wallace gemeinsam für diese Erzählung von über 1000 Seiten, mit der ihnen eine reichhaltige Chronik der Stadt gelungen ist, von den urzeitlichen Tagen der Lenape-Indianer bis zu der Zeit, als diese große amerikanische Stadt -- mit dem späteren Präsidenten Teddy Roosevelt als Polizeikommissar -- als die "Hauptstadt der Welt" angesehen wurde. Das reine Ausmaß des Buches wirkt möglicherweise etwas abschreckend, aber der Leser kann es ja auf typisch New Yorker Weise in Angriff nehmen: Die, die sich nicht dafür erwärmen können, die gesamte Geschichte der Stadt zu lesen, können problemlos ein- und auspendeln, um sich einzelne Kapitel vorzunehmen -- sie sind in sich abgeschlossen und behandeln die wesentlichen Themen einer bestimmten Zeit. Gotham ist zwar randvoll mit Fakten (mit einem kritischen Anhang, inklusive einer Bibliographie und zweier Indizes -- den einen für Namen, den anderen für Themen), der Schreibstil zeichnet sich jedoch durch Klarheit und Stil aus. "Was ist unser Ziel, unser Standpunkt, unser Interesse?" fragen sich die Autoren in ihrer Einleitung. Egal, wie man es nennen mag -- ihre Art und Weise, zahllose Geschichten miteinander zu verknüpfen, funktioniert wunderbar. Die überraschend detaillierte Recherche und der lebhafte Schreibstil hauchen unzähligen Charakteren Leben ein (von Peter Minuit bis hin zu Boss Tweed) -- und sogar wer glaubt, die Geschichte von New York City zu kennen, wird zweifellos auf fast jeder Seite Überraschungen entdecken. Gotham ist eine Rarität, die als definitives Geschichtsbuch wie auch als fesselnde Erzählung hervorsticht. --Robert McNamara

Amazon.com

Like the city it celebrates, Gotham is massive and endlessly fascinating. This narrative of well over 1,000 pages, written after more than two decades of collaborative research by history professors Edwin G. Burrows and Mike Wallace, copiously chronicles New York City from the primeval days of the Lenape Indians to the era when, with Teddy Roosevelt as police commissioner, the great American city became regarded as "Capital of the World." The sheer bulk of the book may be off- putting, but the reader can use a typically New York approach: Those who don't settle in for the entire history can easily "commute" in and out to read individual chapters, which stand alone nicely and cover the major themes of particular eras very well. While Gotham is fact-laden (with a critical apparatus that includes a bibliography and two indices--one for names, another for subjects), the prose admirably achieves both clarity and style. "What is our take, our angle, our schtick?" ask the authors, setting a distinctly New York tone in their introduction. No matter what it's called, their method of weaving together countless stories works wonderfully. The startlingly detailed research and lively writing bring innumerable characters (from Peter Minuit to Boss Tweed) to life, and even those who think they know the history of New York City will no doubt find surprises on nearly every page. Gotham is a rarity, reigning as both authoritative history and page-turning story. --Robert McNamara

Rezensionen von Amazon.de-Kunden
Diese Rezension von Donal A. O'Neill fanden 2 von 2 Kunden hilfreich:
5 von 5 Sternen A history that does justice to the losers.

This book's 1200 pages and substantial weight should not daunt prospective buyers, for it is has the flow of a well-written novel and holds the reader's attention from the outset. It covers every aspect of New York's growth through nearly three centuries, the emphasis shifting from chapter to chapter from the social to the economic to the industrial to the political, yet always maintaining an easy chronological flow. Old controversies and concerns, many long forgotten, are brought to life through the authors' emphasis on roles played by individuals, and by the hundreds of short biographical sketches woven seamlessly into in the narrative. To do "Gotham" justice would require a far longer review than this, and any one of a dozen different aspects could be selected for praise. The book's most striking feature is perhaps its delineation of the extent to which ethnic and religious resentments dominated the city right until the end of the nineteenth century, emphasising that the "melting pot" was a far from popular or comfortable process. Discrimination and oppression were inherent from the foundation of Nieuw Amsterdam and the later transition from colony to free republic did little to reduce them - indeed the most virulent hatreds appear to have seethed in the middle of the nineteenth century, as entrenched WASP interests resented and resisted the growing presence and power of German and Irish immigrants. The book ends with these interests in uneasy equilibrium and with the wave of Italian and Jewish new arrivals seeking to stake their own positions, with the later in particular bringing a new dimension in social awareness and responsibility. Throughout the period covered the plight of Black Americans is perhaps the most pitiful of all and provides a terrible counterpoint to the growth of prosperity enjoyed by part at least of all other ethnic groups. Though this history is rich in rascals of theatrical wickedness such as Bosses Tweed and Croker, the most odious personalities tend to be respectable establishment figures: the philanthropist John Pintard observing during the 1832 Cholera epidemic "that the sooner "the scum of the city" was dispatched, the sooner the fever, deprived of fodder, would pass" (p.591); the Reverend Henry Ward Beecher (then earning $30,000 per annum) drawing laughter and applause from his congregation during the 1870's Depression by reminding them that though man could not live by bread alone, a family could survive on bread and water - and water was free (p.1036); E.L.Godkin, editor of "The Nation" declaring during that same time of misery that "Free soup must be prohibited" (p.1031). Against so many dismal examples of intolerance, self-righteousness and greed the book's greatest strength is that it saves from obscurity the names of some many of the victims - and of their sufferings and their dignity. This reader, for one, cannot forget Caesar and Prince, Cuffee and Quack, black slaves burned alive for a pathetic conspiracy in 1741; or Clause, another slave, broken alive on the wheel outside City Hall and dying over many hours. Seventeen year-old Lanah Sawyer's wealthy rapist Henry Bedlow, may have been acquitted by a biased jury in 1793, and Lanah vilified, but she has her vindication in these pages. Cecilia and Wanda Stein live on through this book, starving German immigrants "unwilling to take up whoring", who spent their last pennies on some flowers, spruced up their dreary room, got into bed with Wanda's six-year old daughter, and swallowed prussic acid in 1852. There are countless other instances, and it is in its acknowledgement of the price paid by society's losers for the creation of the "Imperial City" of the climax that this work finds its true grandeur. In summary, this is a splendid history, magnificent in conception, thorough and generous-spirited in execution. The reader is left waiting impatiently for the next volume that will carry the story further by another century.

Diese Rezension von Elizabeth O'Brien fanden 1 von 1 Kunden hilfreich:
5 von 5 Sternen Endlessly fascinating story of an endlessly fascinating city

I have only read about a tenth of this mammoth work so far and I have found it to be one of the best written and most interesting books I've ever come across. As an Australian, I've always had a great fascination with New York (I've been there twice) - it's history, it's beautiful skyline and it's great contribution in so many areas like the arts & architecture (the Chrysler Building is one of the most gorgeous pieces of modern design in the world, in my opinion). So, to read such a marvellously written work on the city itself was a book I couldn't resist. Despite it's weight (it's quite a load to carry to work every day on the train) I LITERALLY can't put it down. Well done, Professors Burrows & Wallace - I can't wait for the next volume from 1898 onwards!

Diese Rezension von Frank J. Konopka fanden 0 von 1 Kunden hilfreich:
4 von 5 Sternen Definitely not beach reading!

This isn't the book you throw carelessly into your suitcase to take along and read while relaxing at the beach. It's weight alone would give your arm a cramp, and often its meticulous detail does the same for your mind. It's rather like "Everything you've always wanted to know about New York, and much, much more!" Finishing it, you feel as if you've just completed the New York Marathon: exhausted, but elated. All of the above being said, it's still well worth making the effort to read.

4 von 5 Sternen Four for effort

I agree with the reader from Crandon Lakes, New Jersey. While you can't fault the exhaustive research and the volume of information which has gone into "Gotham", the book lacks interpretative drive and personal vision. Perhaps the lack of a "lyrical" voice which the reader detects is a result of the dual authorship. The need to work through the enormous amount of facts to do with trade, legislation, social policy, financial administration etc, and the understandable need to do this as a combined effort has, at times, swamped the excitement of the subject. Worth persevering, nonetheless.

5 von 5 Sternen Dr. Burrows at Hobart and William Smith Colleges

While I have just begun the incredible task of reading this book I have just had the pleasure of meeting and talking with Dr. Burrows at HWS. He spoke wonderfully about the city of New York. As a native of Cleveland and a former resident of New York as well as a student in the upstate I found his lecture to be stimulating and informative. Lucky are the students of Brooklyn College. I would recommend this book to anyone interested in the megalopolis that is NY and anyone with the stamina to handle this 1400+ page mammoth.

Gotham



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