Capital cities in the aftermath of empires: planning in central and southeastern Europe
Publication details: New York Routledge 2015Description: x,286pISBN:- 9781138889729
- 711.4094 MAK
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book | CEPT Library | Faculty of Architecture | 711.4094 MAK | Available | 019361 |
CONTENTS
The Contributors vii
Introduction
1.Shaping Central and Southeastern European Capital Cities in the Age of Nationalism Emily Gunzburger Makas and Tanja Damljanovic Conley 1
Part 1: South-Eastern European Capitals after the Ottoman Empire
2. Athens Eleni Bastea 29
3. Belgrade Tanja Damljanovic Conley 45
4. Bucharest Maria Raluca Popa 61
5. Cetinje Maja Dragicevic and Rachel Rossner 75
6. Sofia Elitza Stanoeva 91
7. Tirana Gentiana Kere 108
8. Ankara Zeynep Kezer 124
Part 2: Central European Capitals within and after the Hapsburg Empire
9. Budapest Robert Nemes 141
10. Prague Cathleen Giustino 157
11. Bratislava Henrieta Moravcikova 174
12. Cracow and Warsaw Patrice Dabrowski 189
13. Zagreb Sarah A. Kent 208
14. Ljubljana Joerg Stabenow 223
15. Sarajevo Emily Gunzburger Makas 241
Conclusion
16.Not Just the National: Modernity and the Myth of Europe in the Capital Cities of Central and Southeastern Europe 258
Nathaniel D. Wood 270
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