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Cities in the World-System
von Resat Kasaba
Verlag: Praeger
Gebundene Ausgabe
ISBN: 978-0-313-27893-8
Erschienen am 30.10.1991
Sprache: Englisch
Format: 240 mm [H] x 161 mm [B] x 17 mm [T]
Gewicht: 501 Gramm
Umfang: 220 Seiten

Preis: 102,40 €
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Inhaltsverzeichnis
Biografische Anmerkung
Klappentext

Series Foreword by Immanuel Wallerstein
Introduction by Re,sat Kasaba
Cities Before European Hegemony
Was There an Islamic "City"? by Ellis Goldberg
Symbiotic Sisters: Bay of Bengal Ports in the Indian Ocean World-Economy by Ravi Arvind Palat
Hegemonic Cities of the Capitalist World-Economy
Hegemonic Cities in the Modern World-System by Richard Lee and Sheila Pelizzon
The Rise and Fall of Amsterdam and Dutch Hegemony: Evidence from the Baltic Sound Tolls, 1550-1750 by Terry Boswell, Joya Misra, and John Brueggemann
From Dhaka to Manchester: Factories, Cities, and the World-Economy, 1600-1900 by Kenneth Barr
The Formation of a Global Financial Center: London and Its Intermediaries by David R. Meyer
The Rise and Fall of Bohemian Enclaves: A World-System View by Randy Blazak
Semiotics of New York's Artistic Hegemony by Albert Bergesen
Cities Beyond the Core
Ottoman-Arab Seaports in the Nineteenth Century: Social Change in Alexandria, Beirut, and Tunis by Michael J. Reimer
Semiperipheral Urbanization? South Korea in the 1980s by David A. Smith
Bibliography
Index



RESAT KASABA is Assistant Professor at the H. M. Jackson School of International Studies, University of Washington, and Adjunct Professor of Sociology. He is the author of The Ottoman Empire and the World-Economy and has contributed articles and essays to Commercial Agriculture in the Middle East, Review, and Rethinking the Nineteenth Century (Greenwood Press, 1988).



The contributors to this collection question the boundaries and limitations that are imposed on the study of cities by urban sociology. They do not disagree that during most of their history, the regions and peoples of the world have been organized hierarchically and that there are differences that need to be explained. But they see the processes and relations that link regions and people together as the main factor that explains these differences. It is the differentiation and not the differences per se that constitute this volume's focus and, in its respective accounts, taking care not to privilege any one region or time period on the basis of its presumed special characteristics. Against this background the book is divided into three parts. Part one deals with places outside of western Europe and with times that preceded the establishment of the European-based capitalist world-economy. The articles in part two discuss the different aspects of the concept of hegemony and the establishment of domination as these apply to cities in the world-system. In part three the focus shifts back to extra-European zones where the patterns of transformation around cities under the aegis of capitalist world-economy are examined.
This book constitutes an important addition to the literature on cities. By approaching cities from a large-scale and a long-term perspective, the contributors develop a historical explanation of some of the different patterns of development that affected particular cities in their interaction with the world-economy. This historical and holistic perspective represents an improvement over most of urban sociology, where cities or aspects of cities are studied in isolation from all contingent and contextual factors. This book can be used by scholars, graduate, and upper-division undergraduate students of urban history and sociology.