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Palaces for the People

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An illuminating examination.... Klinenberg's observations are effortlessly discursive and always cogent, whether covering the ways playgrounds instill youth with civic values or a Chicago architect's plans to transform a police station into a community center. He persuasively illustrates the vital role these spaces play in repairing civic life. -Publishers Weekly (starred) If America appears fractured at the national level, the author suggests, it can be mended at the local one. This is an engrossing, timely, hopeful read, nothing less than a new lens through which to view the world and its current conflicts. -Booklist (starred) Eric Klinenberg combines a Jane Jacobs-eye on city life with knowledge of the latest research and practical ideas to address the crucial issues of the day-class division, crime, and climate change. This is a brilliant and important book. -Arlie Hochschild, author of Strangers in Their Own Land Reading Palaces for the People is an amazing experience. As an architect, I know very well the importance of building civic places: concert halls, libraries, museums, universities, public parks, all places open and accessible, where people can get together and share experiences. To create good places for people is essential, and this is what I share with Klinenberg: We both believe that beauty, this kind of beauty, can save the world. -Renzo Piano This fantastic book reminds us that democracy is fortified and enlivened by people coexisting together in public, and that good design and support of a wide variety of public spaces can produce those mysterious things we call community, membership, a sense of belonging, a place, maybe a polity. In an age where the push for disembodiment and never leaving the house and fearing and avoiding strangers and doing everything as fast as possible is so powerful, this book makes the case for why we want to head in the opposite direction. It's both idealistic and, in its myriad examples, pragmatic, and delightfully readable. -Rebecca Solnit, author of Men Explain Things to Me and A Field Guide to Getting Lost Wow. A comprehensive, entertaining, and compelling argument for how rebuilding social infrastructure can help heal divisions in our society and move us forward. I can't wait for people in my ideological bubble to ignore it! -Jon Stewart At a time when polarization is weakening our democracy, Eric Klinenberg takes us on a tour of the physical spaces that bind us together and form the basis of civic life. We care about each other because we bump up against one another in a community garden or on the playground or at the library. These are not virtual experiences; they're real ones, and they're essential to our future. This wonderful book shows us how democracies thrive. -Steven Levitsky and Daniel Ziblatt, authors of How Democracies Die Eric Klinenberg believes that social life can be designed well, just as good buildings are. His book is full of hope, which is all the more striking because Klinenberg is a realist. He is a major social thinker, and this is a beautifully written, major book. -Richard Sennett, Professor of Sociology, London School of Economics Fine reading for community activists seeking to expand the social infrastructure of their own home places. -Kirkus Reviews The author's paean to public libraries will strongly appeal to those who support them as well as interested sociologists and urbanists. -Library Journal

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2018, paperback

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