Milton Keynes in British Culture


LOOKING TO PLACE A BULK ORDER?CLICK HERE

Piracy-free
Piracy-free
Assured Quality
Assured Quality
Secure Transactions
Secure Transactions
Fast Delivery
Fast Delivery
Sustainably Printed
Sustainably Printed
Delivery Options
Please enter pincode to check delivery time.
*COD & Shipping Charges may apply on certain items.
Review final details at checkout.

About The Book

<p>The new town of Milton Keynes was designated in 1967 with a bold flexible social vision to impose no fixed conception of how people ought to live. Despite this progressive social vision and its low density flexible green urban design the town has been consistently represented in British media political rhetoric and popular culture negatively. as a fundamentally sterile paternalistic concrete imposition on the landscape as a joke and even as Los Angeles in Buckinghamshire. How did these meanings develop at such odds from residents' and planners' experiences? Why have these meanings proved so resilient? </p><p></p><p>Milton Keynes in British Culture traces the representations of Milton Keynes in British national media political rhetoric and popular culture in detail from 1967 to 1992 demonstrating how the town's founding principles came to be understood as symbolic of the worst excesses of a postwar state planning system which was falling from favour. Combining approaches from urban planning history cultural history and cultural studies political economy and heritage studies the book maps the ways in which Milton Keynes' newness formed an existential challenge to ideals of English landscapes as receptacles of tradition and closed fixed national identities. Far from being a marginal foreign and atypical town the book demonstrates how the changing political fortunes of state urban planned spaces were a key site of conflict around ideas of how the British state should function how its landscapes should look and who they should be for.</p>
downArrow

Details