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The New England Village

Part of the Creating the North American landscape series
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The New England village, with its white-painted, black-shuttered, classical-revival buildings surrounding a tree-shaded green, is one of the enduring icons of the American historical imagination.

Associated in the popular mind with a time of strong community values, discipline and economic stability, the village of New England is for many the archetypal "city on a hill".

Yet in "The New England Village", Joseph S. Wood argues that this village is a 19th-century place and its association with the colonial past a 19th-century romantic invention.New England colonists brought with them a cultural predisposition toward dispersed settlements within agricultural spaces called "towns" and "villages".

Rarely compact in form, these communities did, however, encourage individual landholding.

By the early 19th century, town centres, where meetinghouses stood, began to develop into the centre villages we recognize today.

Just as rural New England began its economic decline, romantics associated these proto-urban places with idealized colonial village communities as the source of both village form and commercial success.This assessment of the New England village encourages critical thinking about landscape origins and meanings ascribed to them by different people in different periods.

We invent the past, Wood concludes, in our own image - as 19th-century villagers did quite literally and as suburban developers do today.

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Product Details
0801866138 / 9780801866135
Paperback / softback
19/11/2002
United States
English
248 p. : ill.
26 cm
postgraduate /research & professional /undergraduate Learn More
Reprint. Originally published: 1997.