<p>City and Country is a far-reaching, interdisciplinary work seeking to reunite urban and rural scholarship and to allow readers to understand rural and urban places as fundamentally linked within systems. Thomas and Fulkerson emphasize the scale and scope of these urban-rural systems, including these systems' responses to changes in their physical environments, something not commonly addressed in other works on urban environments. This study lays out key theoretical ideas with summarizing bullet points at the end of each section and provides a narrative history of cities across the ancient and modern world, making this work accessible to those beginning to look at urban theory. The authors ground their research in extensive scholarship on urban development, primarily based in sociology, though they also draw heavily from theory in economics, geography, anthropology, and political science.... Highly recommended. Advanced undergraduates through faculty.</p>
Choice Reviews
<p>Using an environmental demographic approach rooted in Complex Adaptive Systems theory, Alexander R. Thomas and Gregory M. Fulkerson provide a coherent and unifying socio-historical account of the development and wide-spread growth of urban-rural systems over thousands of years from their origins in Southwest Asia to the present day.This book makes a very valuable contribution to our understanding of the interdependencies that exist between urban communities and rural areas.City and Country: The Historical Evolution of Urban-Rural Systems will undoubtedly be embraced by the academic community. Instructors teaching both undergraduate and graduate courses in environmental sociology, sociological theory, urban and/or rural sociology, community sociology, and related topics will find this book interesting and germane.</p>
- Gene L. Theodori, Professor of Sociology, Sam Houston State University,
<p>Seeking an approach to understanding the dynamics of urbanization that is integrative of rurality, Thomas and Fulkerson present a sweeping examination of the theoretical conceptualizations and historical dimensions of urbanization and provide a thought-provoking argument for the role of urban dependence on rural exploitation as fundamental to both an historically transcendent and contemporary system. Naming and calling out the role of cultural constructions of rurality in prefiguring how rurality’s essential role in processes of urbanization are both seen and not seen, the authors draw on the fundamental relationship between environment and demography to construct a synthetic view that recognizes the role of rurality in facilitating the survival and vitality of the urban.</p>
- Julie N. Zimmerman, Dr. and Mrs. C. Milton Coughenour Rural Sociology Professor, University of Kentucky,
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Alexander R. Thomas is professor of sociology at SUNY Oneonta.
Gregory M. Fulkerson is professor and chair of the Department of Sociology at SUNY Oneonta.