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Community : Pursuing the Dream, Living the Reality

Part of the Princeton Studies in Cultural Sociology series
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This book tells the story of how a human community comes to be and how aspirations for the good life confront the dilemmas and detours of real life.

Suzanne Keller combines penetrating analysis of classic ideas about community with a remarkable and unprecedented thirty-year case study of one of the first "planned unit developments" in America and the first in New Jersey.

Twin Rivers, this pioneering venture, featured townhouses and shared spaces for children's play and adult work and play in a society that stresses individual over collective goals and private over public concerns.

Hence the timeless questions asked over millennia: How does an aggregate of strangers create an identity of place, shared goals, viable institutions, and a spirit of mutuality and reciprocity?

What obstacles stand in the way and how are these overcome? And how does design generate (or deter) community spirit?

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Product Details
Princeton University Press
0691095647 / 9780691095646
Hardback
26/01/2003
United States
English
352 p. : ill.
24 cm
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Suzanne Keller's thoughtful insights and analysis are especially valuable in these rapidly changing times of both great promise and great danger, as we strive to improve our own communities and develop a genuine world community at peace and with opportunity for all. This fascinating and well-written book is a timely contribution to our understanding of what it takes to create a successful community, and it deserves to be widely read. -- Senator Edward M. Kennedy Suzanne Keller's Community is sociology at its best, in the tradition of Robert K. Merton, Robert S. Lynd, and Herbert Gans... [A] lu
Suzanne Keller's thoughtful insights and analysis are especially valuable in these rapidly changing times of both great promise and great danger, as we strive to improve our own communities and develop a genuine world community at peace and with opportunity for all. This fascinating and well-written book is a timely contribution to our understanding of what it takes to create a successful community, and it deserves to be widely read. -- Senator Edward M. Kennedy Suzanne Keller's Community is sociology at its best, in the tradition of Robert K. Merton, Robert S. Lynd, and Herbert Gans... [A] lu JFS Social groups