<p>Bringing together scholars from a diverse range of disciplines, <em>The City as Target</em> provides a sustained and critical response to the relationship between the concept of targeting (in its many forms) and notions of understanding, imagining and shaping the urban. </p><p>Among the many spatial and graphic terms used to describe cities in urban studies, the word target is rarely encountered. Though equally spatial, it differs from these others by implying some motive force, and, more than that, a force with some intentionality. To target is to aim, to project, and ultimately to impact. It suggests a space of violence, or at least action, or movement resulting in displacement, which most other terms do not. In that sense it is useful, underused, and perhaps revelatory. </p><p>Rather than approach the city as simply a site of growth, processes, and developments, the contributors to this volume treat it as the recipient of attentions. The work draws on a wide variety of geographical sites and historic monuments in order to explore this concept, examining and challenging current urban theories. It seeks to highlight both the power of The Global City and the current vulnerability and fragility of urban culture, exploring the city as a recipient and a culprit in relation to issues including terrorism and urban warfare, the latest cyclical failure of global financial markets, and the relatively new spectre of environmental unsustainability.</p><p>Offering a unique and relevant contribution to the literature, this work will be of great interest to scholars of urban theory, international relations, postcolonial politics and military studies. </p> <p>1. Cities as Targets <em>Ryan Bishop, Gregory Clancey, and John Phillips</em> 2. ‘But with Malice Aforethought’: Cities and the Natural History of <em>Hatred Nigel Thrift</em> 3. Targeting the Imaginist City <em>John Armitage</em> 4. The Refugee War <em>Eyal Weizman</em> 5. Theme Park Archipelago: Convergences of War, Simulation and Entertainment in Urban Targeting <em>Steve Graham</em> 6. Empire or Imperialism: Implications for a "New" Politics of Resistance <em>Pal Ahluwalia</em> 7 . The City-as-Target: Targeting the City <em>Verena Andermatt Conley</em> 8. Tokyo: Water, Earthquake, and Island Universe <em>Suzuki Hiroyuki</em> 9. Vast Clearings: Emergency, Technology, and American De-Urbanization, 1930-1945 <em>Gregory Clancey</em> 10. Concealment and Exposure: Imagining London after the Great Fire <em>Li Shiqiao</em> 11. Moscow: Fortress City <em>Irina Aristarkhova</em> 12. Ars Memoria and Unbombing<em> Tjebbe van Tijen</em> 13. London: The Imperial Target <em>Rajeev Patke</em> 14. : <em>Keizu to Nendaiki:</em> Making and Erasing History in Tsukuba Science City at the Edge of Empire <em>Sharon Traweek</em> 15. The City and the Economy of "Losing": Targeting Competitive Bodies in an Era of Global Competition <em>Robbie Goh </em> 16. The Absorptive Assemblage <em>Jordan Crandall</em> 17. "The Target is the People": Representations of the Village in Modernization and National Security Doctrine <em>Nick Cullather</em></p>