
Marshall Berman
City College turns to one of its own to present the Ninth Annual Lewis Mumford Lecture on Urbanism: Distinguished Professor of Political Science Marshall Berman, who will speak 6:30 p.m. Thursday, May 2, in The Great Hall, Shepard Hall. His topic will be 鈥淓merging From the Ruins.鈥 The talk is free and open to the public.
A philosopher and urbanist, Professor Berman will speak to how much of urban creativity grows out of urban disaster and disintegration. As examples, he will cite New York, which has undergone a remarkable recovery since its fiscal crisis of the 1970s, and Paris, which was burned down in the 19th century, but rose to become the capital of world modernism in the 20th century. He will also discuss the role of the process he calls 鈥渦rbicide鈥 or murder of a city.
Professor Berman grew up in a South Bronx neighborhood that was destroyed to make way for the Cross Bronx Expressway. A graduate of Columbia University, he holds a PhD from Harvard University and serves on the editorial board of 鈥淒issent鈥 magazine. In addition, he is a regular contributor to 鈥淭he Nation,鈥 鈥淣ew York Review of Books,鈥 鈥淏ennington Review,鈥 鈥淣ew Left Review,鈥 鈥淣ew Politics鈥 and the 鈥淰illage Voice Literary Supplement.鈥
He is the author of several books, the most influential being 鈥淎ll that is Solid Melts Into Air,鈥 published in 1982, which explores the meaning of modernity for the individual in several different cultures. It has been translated into more than a dozen languages including Farsi, Chinese, Polish and Hebrew.
His other books include:
鈥 鈥淭he Politics of Authenticity,鈥 (1970) about the theme of self-alienation and self-development as it is first imagined in the Enlightenment.
鈥 鈥淎dventures in Marxism,鈥 (1999) which explores the writings of Marx and such intellectuals as Herbert Marcuse, Edmund Wilson and Isaac Babel, who have wrestled with the meaning of Marxism in the 20th century.
鈥 鈥淥n the Town,鈥 (2006) an exploration of urbanism through 鈥100 years of spectacle鈥 in and around Times Square.
Currently he is working on a book called 鈥淭he Romance of Public Space,鈥 which will begin with the ancient Greeks and the Bible and cover various periods of modern city life, culminating with the Occupy Wall Street movement.
About the Lewis Mumford Lecture
Named for writer, architecture critic and urbanist Lewis Mumford, who attended City College, the series invites the world鈥檚 most distinguished urbanists to speak freely and publicly about the future of cities. The series was initiated and is organized by the Graduate Program in Urban Design in the Spitzer School of Architecture. Jane Jacobs, author of several seminal books on urbanism, including 鈥淭he Death and Life of Great American Cities,鈥 delivered the first lecture in 2004.
For more information about the Lewis Mumford Lecture, contact Distinguished Professor Michael Sorkin at msorkins@ccny.cuny.edu .
MEDIA CONTACT
Ellis Simon
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